Hi, sorry to bother your circles, but one paragraph catched my eye ... it is strongly offtopic here, but I couldn't resist to try to educate people - who knows, maybe someday ... I'll live long enough until browser developers will finally understand CSS ... Dne Po 3. prosince 2012 14:35:15, Felix Miata napsal(a): > body {...font-size: 13px...} > > What that rule says is that regardless how the viewer's browser is > configured, or the environment of the user, in particular the pixel density > of his display, 13px shall be used as a base instead. This rudely thwarts > the web's inherent adaptability. this is not 100% true please take a look at http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/syndata.html#value-def-length - especially the image http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/syndata.html#img-pixel1 "For reading at arm's length, 1px thus corresponds to about 0.26 mm (1/96 inch)." so, if "pixel density of his display" is very different from 96 DPI, the CSS px unit should *not* be used 1:1 as display pixels while you may consider setting base font size for reading at arms lenght to 3.38 mm rude in general, it surely does NOT "rudely thwart the web's inherent adaptability" - it *should* adapt to the user's device, and it is just the webbrowser developers' arrogance(*) if it doesn't adapt, go nag them (*) I'd write "laziness" or something less offensive if I hadn't already tried in vain with Gecko and KHTML K. -- Karel Volný QE BaseOs/Daemons Team Red Hat Czech, Brno tel. +420 532294274 (RH: +420 532294111 ext. 8262074) xmpp kavol@xxxxxxxxx :: "Never attribute to malice what can :: easily be explained by stupidity." -- test mailing list test@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/test