I heard you should define sizes and distances in your stylesheet with em instead of in pixels. So the question is why should I use em instead of px when defining styles in css? Is there a good example that illustrates this?
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It is wrong to say that one is a better choice than the other (or both wouldn't have been given their own purpose in the spec). It may even be worth noting that StackOverflow makes extensive use of px units. It is not the poor choice Spoike was told it was. Definition of units
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I have a small laptop with a high resolution and have to run Firefox in 120% text zoom to be able to read without squinting. Many sites have problems with this. The layout becomes all garbled, text in buttons is cut in half or disappears entirely. Even stackoverflow.com suffers from it:
Note how the top buttons and the page tabs overlap. If they would have used em units instead of px, there would not have been a problem. |
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The reason I asked this question was because I forgot how to use em's as it was a while I was hacking happily in CSS. People didn't notice that I kept the question general as I wasn't talking about sizing fonts per se. I was more interested how to define styles on any given block element on the page. As Henrik Paul and others pointed out em is proportional to the font-size used in the element. It's a common practice to define sizes on block elements in px however sizing up fonts in browsers usually breaks this design. Resizing fonts is commonly done with the shortcut keys Using px to define widthHere is an illustrating example. Say we have a div-tag that we want to turn into a stylish date box, we may have html-code that looks like this:
A simple implementation would defining the width of the
The problemHowever if we want to size the text up in our browser the design will break. The text will also bleed outside the box which is almost the same what happens with SO's design as flodin points out. This is because the box will remain the same size in width as it is locked to Using em insteadA smarter way is to define the width in ems instead:
That way you have a fluid design on the date-box, i.e. the box will size up together with the text in proportion to the font-size defined for the date-box. In this example the font-size is defined in |
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It's of use for everything that has to scale according to the font size. It's especially useful on browsers which implement zooming by scaling the font size. So if you size all your elements using |
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Because the em (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Em_(typography)) is directly proportional to the font size currently in use. If the font size is, say, 16 points, one em is 16 points. If your font size is 16 pixels (note: not the same as points), one em is 16 pixels. This leads to two (related) things:
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A very practical reason is that IE 6 doesn't let you resize the font if it's specified using px, whereas it does if you use a relative unit such as em or percentages. Not allowing the user to resize the font is very bad for accessibility. Although it's in decline, there are still a lot of IE 6 users out there. |
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use px for precise placement of graphical elements. use em for measurements having to do positioning and spacing around text elements like line-height etc. px is pixel accurate, em can change dynamically with the font in use |
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The main reason for using em or percentages is to allow the user to change the text size without breaking the design. If you design with fonts specified in px, they do not change size (in IE 6 and others) if the user chooses text size - larger. This is very bad for users with visual handicaps. For several examples of and articles on designs like this (there are a myriad to choose from), see the latest issue of A List Apart: Fluid Grids, the older article How to Size Text in CSS or Dan Cederholm's Bulletproof Web Design. Your images should still be displayed with px sizes, but, in general, it is not considered good form to size your text with px. As much as I personally despise IE6, it is currently the only browser approved for the bulk of the users in our Fortune 200 company. |
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There is a simple solution if you want to use px to specify font size, but still want the usability that em's provide by placing this in your CSS file:
Now specify you
And so on. |
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You probably want to use em for font sizes until IE6 is gone (from your site). Px will be alright when page zooming (as opposed to text zooming) becomes the standard behaviour. Traingamer already provided the neccessary links. |
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The general consensus is to use percentages for font sizing, because it's more consistent across browsers/platforms. It's funny though, I always used to use pt for font sizing and I assumed all sites used that. You don't normally use px sizes in other apps (eg Word). I guess it's because they're for printing - but the size is the same in a web browser as in Word... |
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