443

I've created a site using the Zurb Foundation 3 grid. Each page has a large h1:

body {
  font-size: 100%
}

/* Headers */

h1 {
  font-size: 6.2em;
  font-weight: 500;
}
<div class="row">
  <div class="twelve columns text-center">
    <h1> LARGE HEADER TAGLINE </h1>
  </div>
  <!-- End Tagline -->
</div>
<!-- End Row -->

When I resize the browser to mobile size the large font doesn't adjust and causes the browser to include a horizontal scroll to accommodate for the large text.

I've noticed that on the Zurb Foundation 3 Typography example page, the headers adapt to the browser as it is compressed and expanded.

Am I missing something really obvious? How do I achieve this?

5
  • css rem doesn't dynamically resize based on the viewport window. If you need to do that, then you either need Javascript or one of the pure CSS3 answers below. It's really only something you need on large heading text. Jul 24, 2019 at 16:15
  • @ToolmakerSteve That is a very naive thing to say, especially with the issues of being responsive across all devices. rem is not really a great option at all, you just seem to ignore the answers because it's "complicated"?
    – Emobe
    Feb 23, 2020 at 13:25
  • @Emobe - I agree - my comment was overly simple. I'm not web programming currently, but if I was I might combine css calc with rem and vw - like Buzz's answer, to avoid problems at extreme small/large sizes. Mostly I wanted people to realize that rem avoided problems with em, hence simplifying a responsive solution (less repetition via media queries). And making it unnecessary to rely on SASS for this purpose. Feb 23, 2020 at 23:34
  • @Emobe - csuwldcat's answer is a good starting point: getting the base font to be a reasonable size under all conditions may simplify other calculations. Fine-tuning that base (body) size with a couple of media queries might be all that is needed; then use rem to do the rest of the work on other elements. With an occasional calc as mentioned above. Bottom line is to avoid repetitive media queries that are prone to mistakes when making changes. Feb 23, 2020 at 23:40
  • Font Size seems to become responsive if you set the base font size per width. boom
    – Jovylle
    Apr 5, 2022 at 10:28

34 Answers 34

696

You can use the viewport value instead of ems, pxs, or pts:

1vw = 1% of viewport width

1vh = 1% of viewport height

1vmin = 1vw or 1vh, whichever is smaller

1vmax = 1vw or 1vh, whichever is larger

h1 {
  font-size: 5.9vw;
}
h2 {
  font-size: 3.0vh;
}
p {
  font-size: 2vmin;
}

From CSS-Tricks: Viewport Sized Typography

16
  • 2
    I am currently only coding to webkit - I am in love with this measurement thank you
    – Jeff Voss
    Jul 12, 2013 at 20:05
  • 21
    @MurtazaHussain See: "Can I use Viewport units: vw, vh, vmin, vmax?" Dec 6, 2013 at 10:21
  • 42
    Great, I can use vw to scale text so it doesn't look puny on a desktop! Perfect... Oh. Huh, now the text is too small to read when viewed on a phone. Okay, well I can just use "max(x,y)" to make sure it doesn't get shrunk beyond a minimum size. Perfect... Oh. Hmm. Looks like "max" isn't supported properly by Chrome. Okay, well guess I'll just use "px" again. Jan 28, 2015 at 23:38
  • 14
    This seems not practical to me as the size becomes too small in mobiles and too large in higher resolution desktops.
    – Mr_Green
    Sep 7, 2015 at 11:21
  • 9
    @Mr_Green: That's why you use media queries. On smaller viewports, make the font larger, on larger viewports, make it smaller.
    – Alistair
    Feb 11, 2016 at 4:02
340

The font-size won't respond like this when resizing the browser window. Instead they respond to the browser zoom/type size settings, such as if you press Ctrl and + together on the keyboard while in the browser.

Media Queries

You would have to look at using media queries to reduce the font-size at certain intervals where it starts breaking your design and creating scrollbars.

For example, try adding this inside your CSS at the bottom, changing the 320 pixels width for wherever your design starts breaking:

@media only screen and (max-width: 320px) {

   body { 
      font-size: 2em; 
   }

}

Viewport percentage lengths

You can also use viewport percentage lengths such as vw, vh, vmin and vmax. The official W3C document for this states:

The viewport-percentage lengths are relative to the size of the initial containing block. When the height or width of the initial containing block is changed, they are scaled accordingly.

Again, from the same W3C document each individual unit can be defined as below:

vw unit - Equal to 1% of the width of the initial containing block.

vh unit - Equal to 1% of the height of the initial containing block.

vmin unit - Equal to the smaller of vw or vh.

vmax unit - Equal to the larger of vw or vh.

And they are used in exactly the same way as any other CSS value:

.text {
  font-size: 3vw;
}

.other-text {
  font-size: 5vh;
}

Compatibility is relatively good as can be seen here. However, some versions of Internet Explorer and Edge don’t support vmax. Also, iOS 6 and 7 have an issue with the vh unit, which was fixed in iOS 8.

4
  • 48
    What about font-size: 1.5vw;?
    – Dev_NIX
    Jul 18, 2016 at 10:19
  • 52
    Better yet, font-size: calc(12px + 1vw)
    – cuzox
    Jul 11, 2018 at 14:24
  • 6
    @Dev_NIX What about it? Nov 15, 2018 at 19:48
  • 1
    @Cuzox You should submit that as an answer, other solutions bring the test way to small to be able to use those methods for anything useful. When you combine a static height like that it makes it useful
    – ricks
    Mar 27, 2019 at 16:02
100
h1{
  font-size : clamp(2rem, 10vw, 5rem);
}

here clamp has 3 arguments.

  • first one is the minimum allowed font-size.

  • third one is the maximum allowed font-size.

  • second argument is font-size that you wish to always have. Its unit must be relative(vw, vh, ch) and not absolute(i.e not px, mm, pt). relative unit will make it change its size w.r.t the changing screen sizes.

Consider an example : consider there is a large fontawesome icon that you want to resize dynamically (responsive icon)

.fa-random-icon {
   font-size: clamp( 15rem, 80vw, 80vh)   
}

  • Here 80vw is the preferred font-size.
  • 15 rem is the minimum font size (lower bound).
  • 80vh is the max font size (upper bound).

i.e.

  • if in a particular mobile screen size if 80vw < 15rem then font-size is 15rem.

  • if screen is too wide then if 80vw > 80vh then font-size is 80vh.

Those methods above suggested by people always have a bit uncertain result... like when we use vw only, the font size might sometimes be too big or too small (unbounded).

@media queries can be used but you have to use minimum 3 media-queries to make the font size responsive

3
  • This solution is brilliant. I'd never heard of "clamp" before now. Thank you!
    – Laura Sage
    Jun 9, 2022 at 18:28
  • 4
    This solution needs to be the accepted answer in 2022. Modern CSS for the win. Aug 10, 2022 at 19:21
  • Take a bow clamp champ. This worked great for my tables Sep 14, 2022 at 3:02
74

I've been playing around with ways to overcome this issue, and believe I have found a solution:

If you can write your application for Internet Explorer 9 (and later) and all other modern browsers that support CSS calc(), rem units, and vmin units. You can use this to achieve scalable text without media queries:

body {
  font-size: calc(0.75em + 1vmin);
}

Here it is in action: http://codepen.io/csuwldcat/pen/qOqVNO

5
  • 2
    I should note that the difference here is that using calc to combine the two units is an easy way to help mute the variance in vw text scale at extremes.
    – csuwldcat
    Sep 27, 2015 at 6:44
  • the viewport units are great for any project that doesn't need compatibility with old browsers. This calc trick does exactly what you say, scaling the text smoothly (opposed to strict limits set by media queries) but at a lesser (or higher!) ratio than the change in screen size
    – Ward D.S.
    Jun 22, 2016 at 13:15
  • How it should be used ? I mean, if I want to change the size of my font, should I change only the em unit, only the vmin unit or the both ?
    – snoob dogg
    May 5, 2020 at 18:50
  • I came here to write this extremely simple solution but then saw your answer and give +1. We can apply this solution to every element. For example image width: calc( 50px + 10vw) May 21, 2020 at 23:42
  • Using vmin is interesting, but it means that the text size can change if the window width changes OR the window height! Try making the codepen window shorter (on desktop) to see what I mean.
    – changokun
    Feb 28, 2022 at 0:52
36

Use CSS media specifiers (that's what they [zurb] use) for responsive styling:

@media only screen and (max-width: 767px) {

   h1 {
      font-size: 3em;
   }

   h2 {
      font-size: 2em;
   }

}
0
29

If you don't mind to use a jQuery solution you can try TextFill plugin

jQuery TextFill resizes text to fit into a container and makes font size as big as possible.

https://github.com/jquery-textfill/jquery-textfill

0
18

There are several ways to achieve this.

Use a media query, but it requires font sizes for several breakpoints:

body
{
    font-size: 22px;
}

h1
{
    font-size: 44px;
}

@media (min-width: 768)
{
    body
    {
        font-size: 17px;
    }
    h1
    {
        font-size: 24px;
    }
}

Use dimensions in % or em. Just change the base font size, and everything will change. Unlike the previous one, you could just change the body font and not h1 every time or let the base font size be the default of the device and the rest all in em:

  1. “Ems” (em): The “em” is a scalable unit. An em is equal to the current font-size, for instance, if the font-size of the document is 12 pt, 1 em is equal to 12 pt. Ems are scalable in nature, so 2 em would equal 24 pt, .5 em would equal 6 pt, etc..
  2. Percent (%): The percent unit is much like the “em” unit, save for a few fundamental differences. First and foremost, the current font-size is equal to 100% (i.e. 12 pt = 100%). While using the percent unit, your text remains fully scalable for mobile devices and for accessibility.

See kyleschaeffer.com/....

CSS 3 supports new dimensions that are relative to the view port. But this doesn't work on Android:

  1. 3.2vw = 3.2% of width of viewport
  2. 3.2vh = 3.2% of height of viewport
  3. 3.2vmin = Smaller of 3.2vw or 3.2vh
  4. 3.2vmax = Bigger of 3.2vw or 3.2vh

    body
    {
        font-size: 3.2vw;
    }
    

See CSS-Tricks ... and also look at Can I Use...

16

There's another approach to responsive font sizes - using rem units.

html {
    /* Base font size */
    font-size: 16px;
}

h1 {
    font-size: 1.5rem;
}

h2 {
    font-size: 1.2rem;
}

Later in media queries, you can adjust all fonts sizes by changing the base font size:

@media screen and (max-width: 767px) {
    html {
      /* Reducing base font size will reduce all rem sizes */
      font-size: 13px;
    }

    /* You can reduce font sizes manually as well */
    h1 {
        font-size: 1.2rem;
    }
    h2 {
        font-size: 1.0rem;
    }
}

To make this work in Internet Explorer 7 and Internet Explorer 8 you will have to add a fallback with px units:

h1 {
    font-size: 18px;
    font-size: 1.125rem;
}

If you're developing with Less, you can create a mixin that will do the math for you.

Rem units support - http://caniuse.com/#feat=rem

13

The "vw" solution has a problem when going to very small screens. You can set the base size and go up from there with calc():

font-size: calc(16px + 0.4vw);
1
  • I used font-size: calc(1.2rem + 1vw) for a heading. That way I had the advantage of using a non-pixel based unit (though that may not be applicable here). I also had a fallback in plain ems for older browsers Finally, since that got a little small on mobile, I used a media query for those. That may be too elaborate, but it seems to do what I wanted. Jul 24, 2019 at 16:05
11

I saw a great article from CSS-Tricks. It works just fine:

body {
    font-size: calc([minimum size] + ([maximum size] - [minimum size]) * ((100vw -
    [minimum viewport width]) / ([maximum viewport width] - [minimum viewport width])));
}

For example:

body {
    font-size: calc(14px + (26 - 14) * ((100vw - 300px) / (1600 - 300)));
}

We can apply the same equation to the line-height property to make it change with the browser as well.

body {
    font-size: calc(14px + (26 - 14) * ((100vw - 300px) / (1600 - 300)));
    line-height: calc(1.3em + (1.5 - 1.2) * ((100vw - 300px)/(1600 - 300)));
}
1
  • Is there a way to make font-size to not be greater than the defined [maximum-size] ? Oct 8, 2019 at 15:15
10

This is partly implemented in foundation 5.

In file _type.scss they have two sets of header variables:

// We use these to control header font sizes
// for medium screens and above

$h1-font-size: rem-calc(44) !default;
$h2-font-size: rem-calc(37) !default;
$h3-font-size: rem-calc(27) !default;
$h4-font-size: rem-calc(23) !default;
$h5-font-size: rem-calc(18) !default;
$h6-font-size: 1rem !default;


// We use these to control header size reduction on small screens
$h1-font-reduction: rem-calc(10) !default;
$h2-font-reduction: rem-calc(10) !default;
$h3-font-reduction: rem-calc(5) !default;
$h4-font-reduction: rem-calc(5) !default;
$h5-font-reduction: 0 !default;
$h6-font-reduction: 0 !default;

For medium up, they generate sizes based on the first set of variables:

@media #{$medium-up} {
    h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { line-height: $header-line-height; }
    h1 { font-size: $h1-font-size; }
    h2 { font-size: $h2-font-size; }
    h3 { font-size: $h3-font-size; }
    h4 { font-size: $h4-font-size; }
    h5 { font-size: $h5-font-size; }
    h6 { font-size: $h6-font-size; }
}

And for default-i.e small screens, they use a second set of variables to generates CSS:

h1 { font-size: $h1-font-size - $h1-font-reduction; }
h2 { font-size: $h2-font-size - $h2-font-reduction; }
h3 { font-size: $h3-font-size - $h3-font-reduction; }
h4 { font-size: $h4-font-size - $h4-font-reduction; }
h5 { font-size: $h5-font-size - $h5-font-reduction; }
h6 { font-size: $h6-font-size - $h6-font-reduction; }

You can use these variables and override in your custom scss file to set font sizes for respective screen sizes.

7

A responsive font size can also be done with this JavaScript code called FlowType:

FlowType - Responsive web typography at its finest: font-size based on element width.

Or this JavaScript code called FitText:

FitText - Makes font-sizes flexible. Use this plugin on your responsive design for ratio-based resizing of your headlines.

7

If you are using a build tool then try Rucksack.

Otherwise, you can use CSS variables (custom properties) to easily control the minimum and maximum font sizes like so (demo):

* {
  /* Calculation */
  --diff: calc(var(--max-size) - var(--min-size));
  --responsive: calc((var(--min-size) * 1px) + var(--diff) * ((100vw - 420px) / (1200 - 420))); /* Ranges from 421px to 1199px */
}

h1 {
  --max-size: 50;
  --min-size: 25;
  font-size: var(--responsive);
}

h2 {
  --max-size: 40;
  --min-size: 20;
  font-size: var(--responsive);
}
2
  • Do you have a reference to that Rucksack you speak of? Sep 28, 2019 at 19:47
  • @PeterMortensen for some reason this css tricks article says that we can now use min(), and, even though MDN and caniuse claim min() is supported across the board, for some reason its not working?
    – oldboy
    Oct 23, 2020 at 23:47
6

I had just come up with an idea with which you only have to define the font size once per element, but it is still influenced by media queries.

First, I set the variable "--text-scale-unit" to "1vh" or "1vw", depending on the viewport using the media queries.

Then I use the variable using calc() and my multiplicator number for font-size:

/* Define a variable based on the orientation. */
/* The value can be customized to fit your needs. */
@media (orientation: landscape) {
  :root{
    --text-scale-unit: 1vh;
  }
}
@media (orientation: portrait) {
  :root {
    --text-scale-unit: 1vw;
  }
}


/* Use a variable with calc and multiplication. */
.large {
  font-size: calc(var(--text-scale-unit) * 20);
}
.middle {
  font-size: calc(var(--text-scale-unit) * 10);
}
.small {
  font-size: calc(var(--text-scale-unit) * 5);
}
.extra-small {
  font-size: calc(var(--text-scale-unit) * 2);
}
<span class="middle">
  Responsive
</span>
<span class="large">
  text
</span>
<span class="small">
  with one
</span>
<span class="extra-small">
  font-size tag.
</span>

In my example I only used the orientation of the viewport, but the principle should be possible with any media queries.

1
  • 3
    Why don't you simply use vmin and vmax instead of this @media business? Jun 21, 2019 at 15:33
5

A lot of answers but I did not see anyone mentioning the min or max functions combined with media queries

There is a max() function in CSS, so our example above becomes a one-liner:

font-size: max(30vw, 30px);

Or double it up with a min and max:

font-size: min(max(16px, 4vw), 22px);

Which is identical to:

font-size: clamp(16px, 4vw, 22px);

Then don't forget to wrap this in a media query and apply to your h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 how you prefer.

    @media (max-width: 600px) {
      h1 {
           font-size: clamp(16px, 4vw, 22px);
         }
    }
4

I use these CSS classes, and they make my text fluid on any screen size:

.h1-fluid {
    font-size: calc(1rem + 3vw);
    line-height: calc(1.4rem + 4.8vw);
}

.h2-fluid {
    font-size: calc(1rem + 2vw);
    line-height: calc(1.4rem + 2.4vw);
}

.h3-fluid {
    font-size: calc(1rem + 1vw);
    line-height: calc(1.4rem + 1.2vw);
}

.p-fluid {
    font-size: calc(1rem + 0.5vw);
    line-height: calc(1.4rem + 0.6vw);
}
1
  • the h3 one seems to be working well. Thanks! Jun 11, 2022 at 18:46
4

Try including this on your style sheet:

html {
  font-size: min(max(16px, 4vw), 22px);
}

More info at https://css-tricks.com/simplified-fluid-typography/

2
  • is this supported these days? it doesnt work for me even though MDN and caniuse say its supported across the board?
    – oldboy
    Oct 23, 2020 at 23:51
  • This is a great option, because Safari 13.0.5 has no support for clamp and this version is not old enough in jan/2023 (was released in 2020 ~2 years). With min/max the compatibility extends to Safari 11.1, which was released in 2018 ~ 4 years. With this simple solution we extend a lot the compatibility with responsive font-sizes, margins, positions etc. for mac users. Jan 20, 2023 at 15:13
3

There are the following ways by which you can achieve this:

  1. Use rem for e.g. 2.3 rem
  2. Use em for e.g. 2.3em
  3. Use % for e.g. 2.3% Moreover, you can use : vh, vw, vmax and vmin.

These units will autoresize depending upon the width and height of the screen.

3

jQuery's "FitText" is probably the best responsive header solution. Check it out at GitHub: https://github.com/davatron5000/FitText.js

1
  • 2
    This doesn't seem to be a direct answer to the question on why the font doesn't adjust. In any case, link only answers are not encouraged in SO. Please consider adding more details/sample code.
    – Harry
    Nov 24, 2013 at 7:53
3

In actual original Sass (not scss) you could use the below mixins to automatically set the paragraph's and all headings' font-size.

I like it because it is much more compact. And quicker to type. Other than that, it provides the same functionality. Anyway, if you still want to stick to the new syntax - scss, then feel free to convert my Sass content to scss here: [CONVERT SASS TO SCSS HERE]

Below I give you four Sass mixins. You will have to tweak their settings to your needs.

=font-h1p-style-generator-manual() // You don’t need to use this one. Those are only styles to make it pretty.
=media-query-base-font-size-change-generator-manual() // This mixin sets the base body size that will be used by the h1-h6 tags to recalculate their size in a media query.
=h1p-font-size-generator-auto($h1-fs: 3em, $h1-step-down: 0.3, $body-min-font-size: 1.2em, $p-same-as-hx: 6) // Here you will set the size of h1 and size jumps between h tags
=config-and-run-font-generator() // This one only calls the other ones

After you finish playing with settings just make a call on one mixin - which is: +config-and-run-font-generator(). See code below and comments for more information.

I guess you could do it automatically for a media query like it is done for header tags, but we all use different media queries, so it would not be appropriate for everyone. I use a mobile-first design approach, so this is how I would do that. Feel free to copy and use this code.

COPY AND PASTE THESE MIXINS TO YOUR FILE:

=font-h1p-style-generator-manual()
  body
    font-family: "Source Sans Pro", "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif // google fonts
    font-size: 100%
    line-height: 1.3em
  %headers
    line-height: 1em
    font-weight: 700
  p
    line-height: 1.3em
    font-weight: 300
  @for $i from 1 through 6
    h#{$i}
      @extend %headers


=media-query-base-font-size-change-generator-manual()
  body
    font-size: 1.2em
  @media screen and (min-width: 680px)
    body
      font-size: 1.4em
  @media screen and (min-width: 1224px)
    body
      font-size: 1.6em
  @media screen and (min-width: 1400px)
    body
      font-size: 1.8em

=h1p-font-size-generator-auto($h1-fs: 3em, $h1-step-down: 0.3, $body-min-font-size: 1.2em, $p-same-as-hx: 6)
  $h1-fs: $h1-fs // Set first header element to this size
  $h1-step-down: $h1-step-down // Decrement each time by 0.3
  $p-same-as-hx: $p-same-as-hx // Set p font-sieze same as h(6)
  $h1-fs: $h1-fs + $h1-step-down // Looping correction
  @for $i from 1 through 6
    h#{$i}
      font-size: $h1-fs - ($h1-step-down * $i)
    @if $i == $p-same-as-hx
      p
        font-size: $h1-fs - ($h1-step-down * $i)

// RUN ONLY THIS MIXIN. IT WILL TRIGGER THE REST
=config-and-run-font-generator()
  +font-h1p-style-generator-manual() // Just a place holder for our font style
  +media-query-base-font-size-change-generator-manual() // Just a placeholder for our media query font size
  +h1p-font-size-generator-auto($h1-fs: 2em, $h1-step-down: 0.2, $p-same-as-hx: 5) // Set all parameters here

CONFIGURE ALL MIXINS TO YOUR NEEDS - PLAY WITH IT! :) AND THEN CALL IT ON THE TOP OF YOUR ACTUAL SASS CODE WITH:

+config-and-run-font-generator()

This would generate this output. You can customize parameters to generate different sets of results. However, because we all use different media queries, some mixins you will have to edit manually (style and media).

GENERATED CSS:

body {
  font-family: "Source Sans Pro", "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
  font-size: 100%;
  line-height: 1.3em;
  word-wrap: break-word; }

h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
  line-height: 1em;
  font-weight: 700; }

p {
  line-height: 1.3em;
  font-weight: 300; }

body {
  font-size: 1.2em; }

@media screen and (min-width: 680px) {
  body {
    font-size: 1.4em; } }
@media screen and (min-width: 1224px) {
  body {
    font-size: 1.6em; } }
@media screen and (min-width: 1400px) {
  body {
    font-size: 1.8em; } }
h1 {
  font-size: 2em; }

h2 {
  font-size: 1.8em; }

h3 {
  font-size: 1.6em; }

h4 {
  font-size: 1.4em; }

h5 {
  font-size: 1.2em; }

p {
  font-size: 1.2em; }

h6 {
  font-size: 1em;

}
3

The text size can be set with a vw unit, which means the "viewport width". That way the text size will follow the size of the browser window:

https://www.w3schools.com/howto/tryit.asp?filename=tryhow_css_responsive_text

For my personal project I used vw and @meida. It works perfectly.

.mText {
    font-size: 6vw;
}

@media only screen and (max-width: 1024px) {
    .mText {
        font-size: 10vw;
    }
}


.sText {
    font-size: 4vw;
}

@media only screen and (max-width: 1024px) {
    .sText {
        font-size: 7vw;
    }
}
3

We can use calc() from css

p{
font-size: calc(48px + (56 - 48) * ((100vw - 300px) / (1600 - 300))) !important;
}

The mathematical formula is calc(minsize + (maxsize - minsize) * (100vm - minviewportwidth) / (maxwidthviewoport - minviewportwidth)))

Codepen

2

As with many frameworks, once you "go off the grid" and override the framework's default CSS, things will start to break left and right. Frameworks are inherently rigid. If you were to use Zurb's default H1 style along with their default grid classes, then the web page should display properly on mobile (i.e., responsive).

However, it appears you want very large 6.2em headings, which means the text will have to shrink in order to fit inside a mobile display in portrait mode. Your best bet is to use a responsive text jQuery plugin such as FlowType and FitText. If you want something light-weight, then you can check out my Scalable Text jQuery plugin:

http://thdoan.github.io/scalable-text/

Sample usage:

<script>
$(document).ready(function() {
  $('.row .twelve h1').scaleText();
}
</script>
1
  • I think scaling textes/ resizing text for responsive usage should be left to the browser, epspecially for the media queries this what they are designed for.
    – user254197
    Aug 22, 2015 at 7:23
2
 h1 { font-size: 2.25em; } 
 h2 { font-size: 1.875em; }
 h3 { font-size: 1.5em; }
 h4 { font-size: 1.125em; }
 h5 { font-size: 0.875em; }
 h6 { font-size: 0.75em; }
2
  • 6
    While this code snippet may solve the question, including an explanation really helps to improve the quality of your post. Remember that you are answering the question for readers in the future, and those people might not know the reasons for your code suggestion. Apr 27, 2016 at 21:15
  • An explanation would be in order. Sep 28, 2019 at 19:44
2

You can make the font size responsive if defining it in vw (viewport width). However, not all browsers support it. The solution is to use JavaScript to change the base font size depending on the browser width and set all font sizes in %.

Here is an article describing how to make responsive fontsizes: http://wpsalt.com/responsive-font-size-in-wordpress-theme/

1
  • The link seems to be broken: "403 Forbidden. nginx/1.10.3" Sep 28, 2019 at 19:31
2

I have found this solution, and it works very well for me:

/* Fluid font size:
minimum font size at min. device width 300px = 14
maximum font size at max. device width 1600px = 26
*/

body {
    font-size: calc(14px + (26 - 14) * ((100vw - 300px) / (1600 - 300)));
}
2

One way to solve the problem of the text to look good on both desktop and mobile/tablet is in fixing the text size to physical units like physical centimeters or inches, which don't depend on the screen PPI (points per inch).

Based on this answer, below is the code I use at the end of the HTML document for a responsive font size:

<div id='testdiv' style='height: 1in; left: -100%; position: absolute; top: -100%; width: 1in;'></div>
<script type='text/javascript'>
  var devicePixelRatio = window.devicePixelRatio || 1;
  dpi_x = document.getElementById('testdiv').offsetWidth * devicePixelRatio;
  dpi_y = document.getElementById('testdiv').offsetHeight * devicePixelRatio;

  function setFontSizeForClass(className, fontSize) {
      var elms = document.getElementsByClassName(className);
      for(var i=0; i<elms.length; i++) {
          elms[i].style.fontSize = String(fontSize * dpi_y / 96) + "px";
      }
  }

  setFontSizeForClass('h1-font-size', 30);
  setFontSizeForClass('action-font-size', 20);
  setFontSizeForClass('guideline-font-size', 25);
  // etc for your different classes
</script>

In the code above the items of a different class are assigned font sizes in physical units, as long as the browser/OS is configured correctly for the PPI of its screen.

A physical-unit font is always not too large and not too small, so long as the distance to the screen is usual (book-reading distance).

2

Use this equation:

calc(42px + (60 - 42) * (100vw - 768px) / (1440 - 768));

For anything larger or smaller than 1440 and 768, you can either give it a static value, or apply the same approach.

The drawback with vw solution is that you cannot set a scale ratio, say a 5vw at screen resolution 1440 may end up being 60px font-size, your idea font size, but when you shrink the window width down to 768, it may ended up being 12px, not the minimal you want.

With this approach, you can set your upper boundary and lower boundary, and the font will scale itself in between.

1

After many conclusions I ended up with this combination:

@media only screen and (max-width: 730px) {

    h2 {
        font-size: 4.3vw;
    }
}
1

Try this size in your root in your html. It works almost for all devices from mobile phones till TVs and big screens. In case of some very extreme cases, you could use media queries.

:root{
    font-size: max(14px, 1.1vmax); 
}

vmax takes care of cases where device height is bigger than device width or vice versa, 14px instead of base 16px as for tiny devices, 14px gives more room than 16px which could overflow device width, and it's still readable and not too far from 16px.

For the rest of your page css, try using rem relative values to the root base font-size instead of using absolute units .e.g. px.

Anyway, you would get good resuls for base px between 12px up to 16px, and view-port based sizes between 1vmax up to 1.25vmax, you could also try using vmin or vh or vw depending on your preference.

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