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#11
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For any piece of copy with more than one font family and/or size, it’s a rather silly assumption that the grid would not be relevant (if it is possible is an entirely different question). |
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And how _could_ you make an image I do know how to do that, and it works very well; not on your OS though, I suppose. ![]() |
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or a table, for example Well, relative font sizing is rather inconsistent, I can agree there. |
#12
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Scripsit Eric B. Bednarz: For any piece of copy with more than one font family and/or size, it’s a rather silly assumption that the grid would not be relevant (if it is possible is an entirely different question). This is getting interesting, though apparently off-topic (baseline grids would belong to CSS rather than HTML). |
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I'm curious, because the way I see the idea of the grid, it's meant to serve the purpose of making facing pages (in a printed publication) symmetric in form. What would be the point in a continuous medium like a scrollable window? That is, for example, why would it be useful to position lines of text in a grid, so that, for example, if you leave some vertical space after a list, the space is an integral multiple of the line height? |
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I don't think it depends on the OS. Rather, the issue is: When you are not making print design, how could you make the total vertical space occupied by an image an integral multiple of the line height? |
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Even if you used, gasp, fixed font size and fixed line height in, say, points or pixels, how could you make a table, together with its top and bottom margin, take a height that is a multiple of the line height? You would end up with setting pretty much _everything_, including the heights of rows, in points or pixels, and there goes almost all flexibility. |
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