Re: A11y woes




On 19/02/2006, at 10:58 PM, Don Scorgie wrote:

1. Fonts
I've added a little about the "Fixed width font" and "Document font" so far. However, I don't really know what they're actually used for : ( So,
are these descriptions even vaguely related to reality:
Document font: font to use for displaying documents.
Fixed Width font: font to use for editing documents.

I can contribute a little here.

Variable-width fonts, which I hope the 'document fonts" are, are reading fonts. However accustomed we might become to reading terminal text, variable-width fonts lead the eye more effectively. (Serif also comes into this, for body text.) More specifically, accented languages look terrible in fixed-width fonts. (I was recently unable to start using an application I would have found very useful, because it didn't support variable-width fonts, and I can't edit for long in Vietnamese in fixed-width.)

True Unicode variable width fonts include: Lucida Grande, Arial, Gentium, Junicode, Titus Cyberbit Basic, and fonts created by language groups for Unicode (I have some beautiful fonts created for Vietnamese, but they cover the whole Unicode set.)

Fixed-width fonts are used for code, numbers, some types of tabular display and ASCII art ;). They make it easier to distinguish individual letters, and columns of letters. They are not for fluent reading, reading of sentences, paragraphs etc. You do get accustomed to them, to some extent, if you edit a lot in the terminal, but they are are harder to scan through, particularly for very ill/disabled people like me.

The only true Unicode fixed-width font of which I know is Everson Mono.

I hope this is useful.

from Clytie (vi-VN, Vietnamese free-software translation team / nhóm Việt hóa phần mềm tự do)
http://groups-beta.google.com/group/vi-VN





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