Leading-Trim: The Future of Digital Typesetting

Publikováno: 21.8.2020

leading-trim is a suggested new CSS property that lets us remove the extra spacing in every font so that we can more predictably style text. Ethan Wang has written about it — including how Microsoft has advocated for it — and that it’s now part of the Inline Layout Module Level 3 spec.

You’d use it like this:

h1 { 
 leading-trim: both;
 text-edge: cap alphabetic;
}

This is telling the browser to look at the font file, dig into the … Read article “Leading-Trim: The Future of Digital Typesetting”


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Celý článek

leading-trim is a suggested new CSS property that lets us remove the extra spacing in every font so that we can more predictably style text. Ethan Wang has written about it — including how Microsoft has advocated for it — and that it’s now part of the Inline Layout Module Level 3 spec.

You’d use it like this:

h1 { 
 leading-trim: both;
 text-edge: cap alphabetic;
}

This is telling the browser to look at the font file, dig into the OpenType metrics, and effectively do what Ethan demonstrates in this gif:

Why do we want to do this? Well, it would let us space text inside a button properly without any strange hacks and we’d be able to set predictable spacing values between different typefaces too. I’m pretty excited about this spec and the CSS property because it gives us yet one more tool to control the use of typography on the web — like taming line height.

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The post Leading-Trim: The Future of Digital Typesetting appeared first on CSS-Tricks.

You can support CSS-Tricks by being an MVP Supporter.

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