Bored with TNR, Arial, Garamond, and Verdana - Any Ideas?
Geoff Hart
ghart at videotron.ca
Tue Oct 10 07:13:56 MDT 2006
Barbara Vega notes: <<Any suggestions for alternates to Arial and
Verdana, and TNR and Garamond for headings? This is for Electronic
copy - Online help, not for printed copy.>>
All of these work well, and (except possibly for Garamond) are
guaranteed to be on any modern computer. That strongly argues in
their favor. At appropriate point sizes, all are quite readable on
the screen, and that's also a plus.
<<I am so bored with these (in the subject of this email). I want to
do something different but I want to stay reasonably conservative too.>>
<rant>Did I miss something? Has our goal as technical communicators
somehow become that of entertaining ourself with typography? As the
late-lamented Andrew Plato would have noted, "we're not [or shouldn't
be] font fondlers".</rant>
Sarcasm aside, there's an important point to be made here. As
communicators, our primary goal must be to communicate, and sticking
with familiar fonts makes that easier. When _Discover_ switched from
their traditional serif font to a tiny sans serif, I found
considerable difficulty getting used to the new font and many more
mistakes reading it. I was seriously ticked off at them for a while,
though I did eventually accomodate. Purely anecdotal evidence,
without any support, but nonetheless a data point for your
consideration: I dislike sans serif for body text, though clearly I
can cope if forced to do so.
<<Serif or Sans Serif are fine, because whichever I go with for the
headings I will make the body copy the other >>
I'm not up on the latest Help technology, but your question leads me
to ask a related question: Each of us has our own font preferences,
and an ideal online document would allow us to substitute our own
preferred fonts and font sizes. I can do this in my Web browser
(Safari) if the font names aren't hard-coded beyond "serif", and I
can switch to iCab if I want to replace your style sheet with mine to
<Fe>override your appalling design sense with my own infinitely
superior one</Fe>*.
* Haven't seen the <Fe> tag before? Details: http://www.geoff-
hart.com/resources/1995-1998/expressive.htm
(As is the case with all Web standards, the implementation of this
one has deviated from the W3C spec. I use if for facetious humor,for
instance. <g>)
Can I enable the same functionality if I create a Help file? If the
answer is "yes", then the answer to Barbara's question is simple:
Define the heading and body fonts as serif and sans serif (or vice
versa), use whatever fonts you like on your own system to display
these choices, and make it easy for your audience to choose a
different font if your choices offend them.
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Geoff Hart ghart at videotron.ca
(try geoffhart at mac.com if you don't get a reply)
www.geoff-hart.com
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