va Most top scientists at ICAR hired through lateral entry since 2007, bypassing reservation norms By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sat, 31 Aug 2024 06:00:00 +0530 Over 2,700 senior scientists, including HoDs, ADGs, DDGs, are hired through interviews only, sans reservations; those recruited through examinations seek ban on lateral entry, as it creates a “toxic” work culture, blocks advancement Full Article Agriculture
va Onam 2024: Flowers and vegetables from Vattiyoorkavu set an example By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Thu, 12 Sep 2024 14:14:41 +0530 MLA VK Prasanth encourages Krishi Bhavan at Vattiyoorkavu to cultivate vegetables and flowers on a vacant plot owned by the government Full Article Life & Style
va Home cooks in Thiruvananthapuram are championing artificial additive-free jams, preserves, juice, ethnic eats and more By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Wed, 16 Oct 2024 13:42:08 +0530 Four home cooks in Thiruvananthapuram are turning fruits into value-added products without using artificial flavours or preservatives Full Article Features
va IPL 2020: Most Valuable Players This Week By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 14 Oct 2020 12:54:01 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players up to Match 25. Full Article IND THE MVPI IPL for K L Rahul CSK AUS Royal Challengers Bangalore ENG KXIP SRH Kagiso Rabada KKR Kings XI Punjab Captain K L Rahul Rahul Tewatia Mayank Agarwal IMAGE KXI
va IPL 2020: Who are Most Valuable Players? By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 19 Oct 2020 13:33:25 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players up to Game 34. Full Article IND CSK AUS RCB IPL SRH ENG KXI Delhi Capitals MVPI PVI Kagiso Rabada Kings XI Punjab Openers Mayank Agarwal IMAGE KKR MVP
va IPL 2020: Most Valuable Players this week By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 26 Oct 2020 18:04:38 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players up to Game 41. Full Article IND CSK AUS RCB Jofra Archer ENG KXI SRH MVPI DC PVI KKR Shikhar Dhawan MVP AFG Quinton de Kock
va Meet IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 29 Oct 2020 18:03:00 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players up to Game 46. Full Article Jofra Archer MVP Purnendu Maji Srinivas Bhogle IMAGE BCCI IPL Rediff Aslam
va Meet IPL 2020's Most Valuable Players By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Nov 2020 16:33:51 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players up to Game 52. Full Article MVPI Jofra Archer PVI Rajasthan Purnendu Maji Kagiso Rabada Rashid Khan Jasprit Bumrah Srinivas Bhogle IMAGE Twitter IPL Rediff Aslam
va Guess who is IPL 2020's Most Valuable Player? By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 13 Nov 2020 12:54:01 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2020's 50 Most Valuable Players. Full Article MVPI Jofra Archer Rajasthan Purnendu Maji Kagiso Rabada Jasprit Bumrah Srinivas Bhogle IMAGE Twitter Rediff Aslam
va Babar named 'Most Valuable Cricketer' in PCB Awards By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Jan 2021 21:05:46 +0530 In the four Tests played during the year, Babar scored 338 runs at an average of 67.6. Full Article Babar Azam PCB Mount Maunganui Kamran Ghulam Naseem Shah Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Aliya Riaz Mohammad Rizwan Fawad Alam Fatima Sana Twitter New Zealand South Africa Bangladesh Pakistan
va Virat Kohli remains India's most-valuable celebrity By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 04 Feb 2021 14:39:09 +0530 Kohli remains the most valued celebrity for the fourth consecutive year with a steady brand value of $237.7 million in 2020 despite the pandemic Full Article
va Pant's India's Most Valuable Player By www.rediff.com Published On :: Thu, 01 Apr 2021 09:05:37 +0530 Srinivas Bhogle and Purnendu Maji list the Most Valuable Players in the India-England ODI series. Full Article MVPI MCA India Shikhar Dhawan Shardul Thakur Rishabh Pant Rohit Sharma Jasprit Bumrah Lokesh Rahul Purnendu Maji Srinivas Bhogle Navdeep Saini Shreyas Iyer Prasidh Krishna Shubman Gill Virat Kohli
va IPL 2021: Jadeja is Most Valuable Player By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Apr 2021 07:50:26 +0530 Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list IPL 2021's Most Valuable Players up to Game 21. Full Article IND Royal Challengers Bangalore MVPI CSK KXI PVI IPL SRH ENG AUS Ravindra Jadeja DC KKR Mumbai Indians Harshal Patel Jonny Bairstow
va SL ODIs: Chahar is Most Valuable Player By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 02 Aug 2021 10:13:27 +0530 Srinivas Bhogle and Purnendu Maji list the Most Valuable Players in the Sri Lanka-India ODI series. Full Article IND MVPI ODI Deepak Chahar Dhananjaya D'Silva Hardik Pandya MVP Sri Lanka Bhuvneshwar Kumar Avishka Fernando Prithvi Shaw Dasun Shanaka Charith Asalanka Akila Dananjaya Kuldeep Yadav Wanindu Hasaranga
va IPL 2022: Umesh Most Valuable Player By www.rediff.com Published On :: Fri, 15 Apr 2022 11:58:53 +0530 The top five includes Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav; both reminding the Indian selectors that they can still be formidable magicians. Full Article IND PBKS LSG Kolkata Knight Riders RCB CSK SRH Kuldeep Yadav DC Umesh Yadav Most Valuable ENG Yuzvendra Chahal AUS AFG PVI Quinton de Kock
va IPL 2022: Hardik Most Valuable Player By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 18 Apr 2022 11:07:35 +0530 When was the last time we saw an IPL top 50 table without the names of Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, M S Dhoni, and with Rishabh Pant getting almost the last empty seat? ask Srinivas Bhogle and Purnendu Maji as they list the 50 Most Valuable Players after the first 29 IPL 2022 games. Full Article IND SRH LSG KKR PBKS CSK RCB DC IPL ENG Gujarat Titans Skipper Hardik Pandya PVI AFG AUS Quinton de Kock Hardik Most Valuable
va Buttler Or Russell:Most Valuable Player? By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 23 May 2022 14:25:09 +0530 Jos Buttler is still the front-runner to be this IPL's MVP.He still has at least two matches to play and one big knock will win it for him.Purnendu Maji and Srinivas Bhogle list Rediff.com's Most Valuable Players after the end of the 70 league matches in IPL 2022. Full Article
va Axar Patel Most Valuable Player! By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 28 Sep 2022 08:13:12 +0530 Srinivas Bhogle and Purnendu Maji list India's Most Valuable ODI Players in the India-Australia T20 series. Full Article
va Richa Ghosh only Indian in ICC's 'Most Valuable Team' By www.rediff.com Published On :: Mon, 27 Feb 2023 16:40:21 +0530 Richa Ghosh's exploits during the side's run to the semis of the Women's T20 World Cup in South Africa earned her a place Full Article
va Gill Is Most Valuable Player of IPL 2023 By www.rediff.com Published On :: Tue, 13 Jun 2023 08:38:07 +0530 Srinivas Bhogle and Purnendu Maji present Rediff.com's Most Valuable Player of IPL 2023. Full Article
va IPL 2024: Most Valuable Performances By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 29 May 2024 10:07:22 +0530 Srinivas Bhogle and Purnendu Maji present Rediff.com's Most Valuable performances of IPL 2024 Full Article
va 'He's the most valuable cricketer right now' By www.rediff.com Published On :: Sun, 15 Sep 2024 15:37:06 +0530 Since making his Test debut in 2018, Bumrah has made 36 Test appearances and has 159 wickets to his name. Full Article
va Observability and mathematics [electronic resource] : Quantum Yang-Mills theory and modelling / Boris Khots. By darius.uleth.ca Published On :: Full Article
va Debt private placements hit record high of Rs. 4,92,000 crore in FY16 By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 31 May 2016 00:00:00 +0530 Total mobilisation six per cent higher than previous financial year Full Article Mumbai Capital
va India among top five innovation destinations: report By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 03 Jun 2016 00:00:00 +0530 Full Article Mumbai Capital
va Tatas extend Rs. 56 cr. to U.K. varsity fellowship scheme By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Thu, 09 Jun 2016 00:00:00 +0530 Full Article Mumbai Capital
va Rupee drops to lowest value ever against U.S. dollar due to equity outflows, oil prices By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 11 Oct 2024 12:05:53 +0530 The currency's decline past the 84 handle is significant as the RBI had been defending that level. Full Article Markets
va Swiggy cuts IPO valuation again, to $11.3 billion, BlackRock and CPPIB to invest: report By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sun, 27 Oct 2024 11:58:30 +0530 BlackRock and Canada Pension Plan Investment Board will invest in the $1.4 billion IPO, which will be the country’s second-biggest stock offering this year Full Article Markets
va Muhurat trading: Sensex, Nifty advance to start Samvat 2081 on a high By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Fri, 01 Nov 2024 18:48:11 +0530 Muhurat trading is a one-hour, symbolic trading session conducted by stock exchanges on the occasion of Diwali, marking the start of the new Samvat year. Full Article Markets
va Stock markets rebound on value buying in banking, steel shares; Sensex jumps 694 points By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 05 Nov 2024 17:12:03 +0530 Bouncing back from Monday's (November 4) sharp fall, the BSE Sensex jumped 694.39 points or 0.88% to settle at 79,476.63 Full Article Markets
va Saidapet-Teynampet elevated corridor project: Highways Dept. removes footpaths on Anna Salai to construct flyover By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Sun, 10 Nov 2024 21:24:11 +0530 The removal of the footpaths will help increase the width of the carriageway at points where lanes on either side of the median will be barricaded Full Article Tamil Nadu
va Crocodile Conservation Centre to come up at Anaikarai By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 19:11:27 +0530 The Centre is to be established at a cost of ₹2.5 crore based on a detailed proposal sent by the Principal Chief Conservator of Forests and Chief Wildlife Warden, Chennai Full Article Tiruchirapalli
va Litigant withdraws PIL seeking revival of 2001 flyover construction scam case against T.N. CM Stalin By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:17:53 +0530 The Madras High Court also permits him to withdraw ₹1 lakh deposited in April this year to prove his bona fide intention Full Article Tamil Nadu
va Vasan urges T.N. govt. to take steps to end illegal sale of narcotic drugs By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 13:48:16 +0530 He expressed concerns over the future of a section of students and youth who were allegedly involved in using and selling such banned substances Full Article Tamil Nadu
va TN to celebrate silver jubilee of unveiling of Tiruvalluvar statue on December 31, January 1 By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:10:10 +0530 Full Article Tamil Nadu
va Kanguva cannot be released without depositing ₹20 crore: Madras High Court By www.thehindu.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 19:40:17 +0530 Justices G. Jayachandran and C.V. Karthikeyan pass the order on an application filed by the Official Assignee of the High Court Full Article Tamil Nadu
va Dynamics of phase-separated microdroplets near the contact line of evaporating all-aqueous drops By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2024, 20,8260-8266DOI: 10.1039/D4SM01056F, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Rahul Rai, Maheshwar Gopu, Senthan Pugalneelam Parameswaran, Tapan Chandra Adhyapak, Dileep MampallilEvaporation of multicomponent drops can induce liquid–liquid phase separation and spatial reconfiguration of phases through complex dynamics near the contact line.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
va Optimality and cooperativity in superselective surface binding by multivalent DNA nanostars By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2024, 20,8515-8523DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00704B, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported Licence.Christine Linne, Eva Heemskerk, Jos W. Zwanikken, Daniela J. Kraft, Liedewij LaanOur study shows that DNA nanostars with three binding sites (ligands) can (1) bind superselectively to surfaces based on receptor density, and (2) that interactions between ligands affect the optimum number of ligands required for superselectivity.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
va Cell shape and orientation control galvanotactic accuracy By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2024, Advance ArticleDOI: 10.1039/D4SM00952E, PaperIfunanya Nwogbaga, Brian A. CamleyWe study the physical factors that control the accuracy with which elongated cells can sense the direction of an electric field, exploring whether cells are more accurate sensors when oriented parallel to the field or perpendicular to it.To cite this article before page numbers are assigned, use the DOI form of citation above.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
va Banana DNA derivatives as homeotropic alignment layers in optical devices By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2024, 20,8561-8569DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00322E, PaperRafał Węgłowski, Anna Spadło, Dorota WęgłowskaIn this study, DNA extracted from bananas was functionalized and used as a homeotropic alignment layer for liquid crystals.The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
va Hydrogel-based 3D fabrication of multiple replicas with varying sizes and materials from a single template via iterative shrinking By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2024, Accepted ManuscriptDOI: 10.1039/D4SM00835A, PaperEunseok Heo, Hye Been Koo, Jun Chang Yang, In Cho, Hyun-Hee Lee, Yong-Jin Yoon, Steve Park, Jae-Byum Chang3D printing technologies have been widely used for the rapid prototyping of 3D structures, but their application in a broader context has been hampered by their low printing throughput. For...The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
va Shape transformations in peptide-DNA coacervates driven by enzyme-catalyzed deacetylation By pubs.rsc.org Published On :: Soft Matter, 2024, Accepted ManuscriptDOI: 10.1039/D4SM01091D, Paper Open Access   This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported Licence.Merlijn van Haren, Nienke Helmers, Luuk Verploegen, Viveca Beckers, Evan SpruijtBiomolecular condensates formed by liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) are important organizers of biochemistry in living cells. Condensate formation can be dynamically regulated, for example by protein binding or enzymatic processes....The content of this RSS Feed (c) The Royal Society of Chemistry Full Article
va Can Guava, Chikoo, Papaya Reduce Blood Sugar? By www.rediff.com Published On :: Wed, 08 May 2024 12:15:02 +0530 rediffGURU Komal Jethmalani, a diabetes expert and dietician, has the answer for you. Full Article
va An Introduction to Variable Fonts By 24ways.org Published On :: Wed, 04 Dec 2019 12:00:00 +0000 Jason Pamental forges a path through the freshly laid snowy landscape of variable fonts. Like a brave explorer in a strange new typography topology let Jason show you the route to some fantastic font feats. Everything you thought you knew has changed. Everything you thought you knew about fonts just changed (for the better). Typography has always been a keen interest of mine, long before we were able to use fonts on the web. And while we’ve had the ability to that now for ten years, we’ve always been constrained by balancing the number of fonts we want to use with the amount of data to be downloaded by the viewer. While good type and typography can bring huge benefits to design, readability, and overall experience—include too many fonts and you negatively impact performance and by extension, user experience. Three years ago, an evolution of the OpenType font format was introduced that changes things in some really remarkable ways. Introducing OpenType Font Variations (aka ‘variable fonts’) As long as I’ve used digital fonts, I’ve had to install separate files for every width, weight, or variant that I want to use. Bold in one file, light in another, condensed italic another one yet again. Installing a whole family for desktop use might involve nearly 100 files. The variable font format is an evolution of OpenType (the format we’ve all been using for years) that allows a single file to contain all of those previously separate files in a single, highly efficient one. The type designer can decide which axes to include, and define minimum and maximum values. See the Pen Variable font, outlined by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. On the web, that means we can load a single file and use CSS to set any axis, anywhere along the allowable range, without any artificial distortion by the browser. Some fonts might only have one axis (weight being the most common), and some may have more. A few are defined as ‘registered’ axes, which are the most common: width, weight, slant, italic, and optical size—but the format is extensible expressly so that designers can define their own custom axes and allow any sort of variation they want to create. Let’s see how that works on the desktop. Just like before, but different One of the ways the new format preserves backwards compatibility with other applications that don’t yet explicitly support variable fonts is something called ’named instances’—which are essentially mapped aliases for what used to be separate files. So whatever the typeface designer had in mind for ‘bold condensed’ would simply map to the appropriate points on the variation axes for weight and width. If the font has been made correctly, those instances will allow the font to be installed and used in recent versions of Windows and the MacOS just like they always have been. If the application fully supports variable fonts, then you would also be able to manipulate individual axes as you see fit. Currently that includes recent versions of Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and InDesign, and also recent versions of the popular web/UI design application Sketch. Discovering the secrets of style To get all of the specifics of what a font supports, especially for use on the web, you’ll want to do one of two things: check the following website, or download Firefox (or better, do both). If you have the font file and access to the web, go check out Roel Nieskens’ WakamaiFondue.com (What Can My Font Do… get it?). Simply drag-and-drop your font file as directed, and you’ll get a report generated right there showing what features the font has, languages its supports, file size, number of glyphs, and all of the variable axes that font supports, with low/high/default values displayed. You even get a type tester and some sliders to let you play around with the different axes. Take note of the axes, values, and defaults. We’ll need that info as we get into writing our CSS. If you don’t have access to the font file (if it’s hosted elsewhere, for example), you can still get the information you need simply by using it on a web page and inspecting it with the Firefox developer tools. There are lots of fantastic videos on them (like this one and this one), but here’s the short version. Thanks to Jen Simmons and the FF dev tools team, we have some incredible tools to work with web fonts right in the browser. Inspect a text element in the font you’re looking to use, and then click on the ‘fonts’ tab over to the right. You’ll then be greeted with a panel of information that shows you everything about the font, size, style, and variation axes right there! You can even change any of those values and see it rendered right in the browser, and if you then click on the ‘changes’ tab, you can easily copy and paste the changed CSS to bring right back into your code. Now that you have all of the available axes, values, defaults, and their corresponding 4-character axis ’tags’—let’s take a look at how to use this information in practice. The first thing to note is that the five ‘registered’ axes have lower-case tags (wght, wdth, ital, slnt, opsz), whereas custom axis tags are always uppercase. Browsers are taking note, and mismatching upper and lower case can lead to unpredictable results. There are two ways to implement the registered axes: through their corresponding standard CSS attributes, and via a lower-level syntax of font-variation-settings. It’s very important to use the standard attributes wherever possible, as this is the only way for the browser to know what to do if for some reason the variable font does not load, or for any alternate browsing method to infer any kind of semantics from our CSS (i.e. a heavier font-weight value signifying bolder text). While font-variation-settings is exactly what we should be using for custom axes (and for now, with italics or italics and slant axes), font-weight (wght) and font-stretch (wdth) are both supported fully in every browser that supports variable fonts. Now let’s have a look at the five registered axes and how to use them. Weight Probably the most obvious axis is weight—since almost every typeface is designed with at least regular and bold weights, and quite often much lighter/thinner and bolder extremes. With a variable font, you can use the standard attribute of font-weight and supply a number somewhere between the minimum and maximum value defined for the font rather than just a keyword like normal or bold. According to the OpenType specification, 400 should equate to normal for any given font, but in practice you’ll see that at the moment it can be quite varied by typeface. p { font-weight: 425; } strong { font-weight: 675; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Weight by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this Besides being able to make use of a broader range for things like big quotes in an extra-thin weight, or adding even more emphasis with a super-chonky one, you should try varying what it means for something to be ‘bold’. Using a ’slightly less bold’ value for bold text inline with body copy (i.e. the ’strong’ tag) can bring a bit more legibility to your text while still standing out. The heavier the weight, the more closed the letterforms will be, so by getting a bit more subtle at smaller sizes you can still gain emphasis while maintaining a bit more open feel. Try setting strong to a font-weight somewhere between 500-600 instead of the default 700. Width Another common variation in typeface design is width. It’s often seen referred to as ‘condensed’ or ‘compressed’ or ‘extended’—though the specifics of what these keywords mean is entirely subjective. According to the spec, 100 should equate to a ’normal’ width, and valid values can range from 1 to 1000. Like weight, it does map to an existing CSS attribute—in this case the unfortunately-named font-stretch attribute and is expressed as a percentage. In these early stages of adoption many type designers and foundries have not necessarily adhered to this standard with the numeric ranges, so it can look a little odd in your CSS. But a width range of 3%-5% is still valid, even if in this case 5% is actually the normal width. I’m hopeful that with more nudging we’ll see more standardization emerge. p { font-stretch: 89%; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Width by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this One of the tricky things about responsive design is making sure your larger headings don’t end up as monstrous one-word-per-line ordeals on small screens. Besides tweaking font-size, try making your headings slightly narrower as well. You’ll fit more words per line without sacrificing emphasis or hierarchy by having to make the font-size even smaller. Italic The Italic axis is more or less what you’d expect. In most cases it’s a boolean 0 or 1: off (or upright) or on—usually meaning slanted strokes and often glyph replacements. Often times the lower case ‘a’ or ‘g’ have slightly different Italic forms. While it’s certainly possible to have a range rather than strictly 0 or 1, the off/on scenario is likely the most common that you’ll encounter. Unfortunately, while it is intended to map to font-style: italic, this is one of the areas where browsers have not fully resolved the implementation so we’re left having to rely upon the lower-level syntax of font-variation-settings. You might give some thought to using this in conjunction with a CSS custom property, or variable, so you don’t have to redeclare the whole string if you just want to alter the Italic/upright specification. :root { --text-ital: 0; } body { font-variation-settings: 'ital' var(--text-ital); } em { --text-ital: 1; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Italic by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this Having Italics as well as upright, along with weight and any other axes available, means you can use one or two files instead of 4 to handle your body copy. And with the range of axes available, you might just not need anything else. Slant The slant axis is similar to Italic, but different in two key ways. First, it is expressed as a degree range, and according to the OpenType specification should be ‘greater than -90 and less than +90’, and second, does not include glyph substitution. Usually associated with sans-serif typeface designs, it allows for any value along the range specified. If the font you’re using only has a slant axis and no italics (I’ll talk about that in a bit), you can use the standard attribute of ‘font-style’ like so: em { font-style: oblique 12deg; } If you have both axes, you’ll need to use font-variation-settings—though in this case you just supply a numeric value without the deg. :root { --text-slnt: 0; } body { font-variation-settings: 'slnt' var(--text-slnt); } em { --text-slnt: 12; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Slant by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this The slant axis allows for anything within the defined range, so opportunities abound to set the angle a little differently, or add animation so that the text becomes italic just a little after the page loads. It’s a nice way to draw attention to a text element on the screen in a very subtle way. Optical Size This is a real gem. This is a practice that dates back over 400 years, whereby physically smaller type would be cut with slightly thicker strokes and a bit less contrast in order to ensure they would print well and be legible at smaller sizes. Other aspects can be tailored as well, like apertures being wider, terminals more angled, or bowls enlarged. Conversely, larger point sizes would be cut with greater delicacy, allowing for greater contrast and fine details. While this was in many ways due to poorer quality ink, paper, and type—it still had the effect of allowing a single typeface design to work optimally at a range of physical sizes. This practice was lost, however, with the shift to photo typesetting and then digital type. Both newer practices would take a single outline and scale it, so either the fine details would be lost for all, or the smaller sizes would end up getting spindly and frail (especially on early lower-resolution screens). Regaining this technique in the form of a variable axis gives tremendous range back to individual designs. The concept is that the numeric value for this axis should match the rendered font-size, and a new attribute was introduced to go along with it: font-optical-sizing. The default is auto, and this is supported behavior in all shipping browsers (well, as soon as Chrome 79 ships). You can force it to off, or you can set an explicit value via font-variation-settings. body { font-optical-sizing: auto; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Optical Size (Auto) by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Or: :root { --text-opsz: 16; } body { font-variation-settings: 'opsz' var(--text-opsz); } h1 { --text-opsz: 48; font-size: 3em; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Optical Size (Manual) by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this A good optical size axis makes type more legible at smaller sizes, and tailoring that to the size it’s used makes a remarkable difference. On the other end of the spectrum, the increased stroke contrast (and anything else the type designer decides to vary) can mean a single font can feel completely different when used larger for headings compared with body copy. Look no further than Roslindale from David Jonathan Ross’ Font of the Month Club, in use on my site to see how big a difference it can be. I’m using a single font for all the headings and body copy, and they feel completely different. Slant & Italics I’m not sure that the creators of the specification were thinking of this when it was written, but technically there is no reason you can’t have separate axes for slant (i.e. angle) and Italic (i.e. glyph substitution). And indeed both DJR and Stephen Nixon have done just that, with Roslindale Italic and Recursive, respectively. With Recursive, you can see how much greater flexibility you can get by separating the angle from the glyphs. It can impart a completely different feel to a block of text to have an angle without the alternate forms. With the state of Italic implementation and the fact that they share the same CSS attribute, this is on that requires the use of font-variation-settings in order to set the attributes separately. :root { --text-ital: 0; --text-slnt: 0; } body { font-variation-settings: 'ital' var(--text-ital), 'slnt' var(--text-slnt); } em { --text-ital: 1; --text-slnt: 12; } .slanted { --text-slnt: 12; } .italic-forms-only { --text-ital: 1; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Slant and Italic by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this Having these axes separated can give you greater design flexibility when creating your typographic system. In some cases you might opt for a slant only, in others both angle and glyph substitution. While it may not be the most critical of features, it does add an extra dimension to the utility and dynamic range of a font. Custom axes While so far there are only five ‘registered’ axes, type designers can also create their own. Any aspect of the typeface design could potentially become an axis. There are the more ‘expected’ ones like serif shape or perhaps x-height (the height of the lower case letters) to much more inventive ones like ‘gravity’ or ‘yeast’. I’ll let someone else elaborate on those, but I will show an example of one I hope will become more common in text and UI designs: grade. Grade The notion of ‘grade’ in a typeface was first introduced to compensate for ink gain on different kinds of paper and presses as a way to visually correct across workflows and have a typeface appear the same on every one. The concept is that you’re essentially altering the weight of the font without changing the spacing. Having this as a variable axis can be useful in a couple of ways. Creating a higher-contrast mode, where the text gets a bit heavier without reflowing, can make text more legible in lower-light situations or in designing for ‘dark mode’. And when animating interface elements it can be add a bit heavier text grade along with a background color shift on hover or tap. It can also come in handy in responding to lower-resolution screens, where type can easily become a bit spindly. Note that custom axes need to be specified in all caps. :root { --text-GRAD: 0; } body { font-variation-settings: 'GRAD' var(--text-GRAD); } body.dark { --text-GRAD: 0.5; } See the Pen Variable Fonts Demo: Grade by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Why you’ll like this I think the biggest use for a grade axis will be for accessibility—designing for things like a dark or high-contrast mode. But you’ll also be able to have some fun with UI animations, like making text heavier on buttons or navigation on hover or focus without altering the physical space occupied by the text. Support Happily support for variable fonts is quite good: recent versions of MacOS and Windows offer support at the OS level, meaning that they can be installed on your system and if the font has any ’named instances’, they will show up in any application’s font menu just as if they were separate fonts. If you have recent versions of Adobe CC applications Illustrator, Photoshop, or InDesign—or recent versions of Sketch—you can manipulate all of the available axes. In browsers, it’s better, and has been for quite some time. According to CanIUse.com it’s around 87%, but the more relevant bit for most is that both dominant mobile platforms and all the major shipping browsers support them. The only really glaring exception is IE11, and given that you can easily use @supports to scope the inclusion of variable fonts it’s perfectly safe to put them in production today. That’s the strategy in use on the new web platform for the State of Georgia in the US, and it’s been deployed on over 40 sites so far and is happily serving static fonts to state employees (IE11 is their default browser) and variable ones to millions of citizens across the state. p { font-family: YourStaticFontFamily; } @supports (font-variation-settings: normal) { p { font-family: YourVariableFontFamily; } } Since CSS is always parsed completely before any other action is taken, you can be sure that browsers will never download both assets. Getting the fonts in your project For now, many of you will likely be self-hosting your variable fonts as at this point only Google is offering them through their API, and so far only in beta. There are a few key differences in how you structure your @font-face declaration, so let’s have a look. @font-face { font-family: "Family Name"; src: url("YourVariableFontName.woff2") format("woff2 supports variations"), url("YourVariableFontName.woff2") format("woff2-variations"); font-weight: [low] [high]; font-stretch: [low]% [high]%; font-style: oblique [low]deg [high]deg; } The first thing you might notice is that the src line is a bit different. I’ve included two syntaxes pointing to the same file, because the official specification has changed, but browsers haven’t caught up yet. Because we have color fonts on the horizon in addition to variable ones (and the possibility that some may be both variable and in color), the syntax needed to be more flexible. Thus the first entry—which could specify ‘woff2 supports variations color’ for a font that supports both. Once browsers understand that syntax, they’ll stop parsing the ’src’ line once they get here. For now, they’ll skip that and hit the second one with a format of woff2-variations, which all current browsers that support variable fonts will understand. For weight (font-weight) and width (font-stretch), if there is a corresponding axis, supply the low and high values (with the percentage symbol for width values). If there is no corresponding axis, just use the keyword ‘normal’. If there is a slant axis, supply the low and high values with ‘deg’ after each number. It’s worth noting that if there is also an italic axis (or only an italic axis and no slant), it’s best at this point to simply omit the font-style line entirely. By supplying these values, you create some guard rails that will help the browser know what to do if the CSS asks for a value outside the allowed range. This way if the weight range is 300-700 and you accidentally specify font-weight: 100, the browser will simply clamp to 300 and won’t try to synthesize a lighter weight. It’s worth noting that this only works with the standard CSS attributes like font-weight or font-stretch. If you use font-variation-settings to set values, the browser assumes you’re the expert and will attempt to synthesize the result even if it’s outside the normal range. Google Fonts is on the case, too Back in September, the Google Fonts team announced a beta version of their API that supports some variable fonts. That support is growing, and more fonts are on the way. If you want to play around with it today though, you can have a look at an article I wrote about how, and check out a CodePen I created that’s using it. Where to find them The first place you should look for variable fonts is Nick Sherman’s v-fonts.com, which has been serving as a de facto catalog site, listing pretty much every variable font available. You can also have a look on GitHub where you’ll find a bunch of projects (in varying stages of completeness, but there are some good ones to be found). Nick also maintains a Twitter account that will tweet/retweet lots of announcements and links, and I publish a newsletter on web typography where I’ll generally include a few links to noteworthy releases. You can also check out Laurence Penney’s Axis-Praxis.org site, the original variable fonts playground where you can put many of them (or even upload your own) into a type testing page that can give you loads of additional detail about available font features. In truth, many designers and foundries are experimenting with making them, so if you’re unsure about availability it’s always worthwhile to ask. Get in touch and I can probably help make the connection! Why it all matters While all of this might be interesting purely from an academic standpoint, there are some significant benefits and opportunities that come from adopting variable fonts. From a performance standpoint, while variable fonts may be larger than single-instance font files, they are still far smaller than the sum total of static files they replace—and often come in smaller than 3-4 single fonts. Which means that page load times could substantially improve. This is the driving motivation for Nielson/Norman Group’s inclusion of Source Sans Variable on their site last year, or what Google has been testing with Oswald Variable on sites 148 million times a day for the past several months. Basically just using them instead of a few static instances to reap the benefits of faster page loads and less code. But beyond that, what really excites me are the design possibilities. Once we have variable fonts on our sites, we’re free to get infinitely more expressive. And with the sophistication of our publishing systems, building some of that flexibility into our publishing process should not be far behind. So creating things like my experiment below shouldn’t be one-off exceptions, but rather part of a regular practice of bringing design back into the publishing process. See the Pen Layout variations, part deux by Jason Pamental (@jpamental) on CodePen. Go have fun I hope this has served as a good starting point to get into designing and developing with variable fonts. Send links and questions—I can’t wait to see what you make! And stay tuned—there just might be another post coming that goes even further ;) In the meantime, if you want to learn more about integrating variable fonts with all sorts of other ideas, check out the ever-amazing Mandy Michael’s site variablefonts.dev. About the author Jason spends much of his time working with clients to establish their typographic systems and digital strategy, helping design and development teams works smarter and faster, and running workshops about all of the above. He is a seasoned design and user experience strategy leader with over 20 years’ experience on the web in both creative and technical roles, and an Invited Expert to the W3C Web Fonts Working Group. Clients range from type industry giants, Ivy League and High Tech, to the NFL and America’s Cup. He also researches and writes on typography for the web: he’s author of Responsive Typography from O’Reilly, articles for TYPE Magazine, .Net Magazine, PRINT Magazine, HOW, Monotype.com, and frequent podcast guest. Author of online courses for Aquent’s Gymnasium platform and Frontend Masters. He’s an experienced speaker and workshop leader, having presented at over 50 national and international conferences. The real story: mainly he just follows Tristan and Tillie around Turner Reservoir, posting photos on Instagram. More articles by Jason Full Article Code typography
va Interactivity and Animation with Variable Fonts By 24ways.org Published On :: Thu, 05 Dec 2019 12:00:00 +0000 Mandy Michael turns the corner on our variable font adventure and stumbles into a grotto of wonder and amazement. Not forgetting the need for a proper performance budget, Mandy shows how variable fonts can free your creativity from bygone technical constraints. If you read Jason’s introductory article about variable fonts, you’ll understand the many benefits and opportunities that they offer in modern web development. From this point on we’ll assume that you have either read Jason’s introduction or have some prior knowledge of variable fonts so we can skip over the getting started information. If you haven’t read up on variable fonts before jump over to “Introduction to Variable Fonts: Everything you thought you knew about fonts just changed” first and then come join me back here so we can dive into using variable fonts for interactivity and animations! Creative Opportunities If we can use variable fonts to improve the performance of our websites while increasing the amount of style variations available to us, it means that we no longer need to trade off design for performance. Creativity can be the driving force behind our decisions, rather than performance and technical limitations. Cookie text effect font: This Man is a Monster, by Comic Book Fonts. My goal is to demonstrate how to create interactive, creative text on the web by combining variable fonts with CSS and JavaScript techniques that you may already be familiar with. With the introduction of variable fonts, designs which would have previously been a heavy burden on performance, or simply impossible due to technical limitations, are now completely possible. Still I Rise Poem by Maya Angelou, Demo emphasising different words with variable fonts. View on Codepen. Variable fonts demo with CSS Grid using multiple weights and font sizes to emphasise different parts of the message. View on Codepen. The tone and intent of our words can be more effectively represented with less worry over the impacts of loading in “too many font weights” (or other styles). This means that we can start a new path and focus on representing the content in more meaningful ways. For example, emphasising different words, or phrases depending on their importance in the story or content. Candy Cane Christmas Themed Text Effect with FS Pimlico Glow by Font Smith. View on Codepen. Note: using variable fonts does not negate the need for a good web font performance strategy! This is still important, because after all, they are still fonts. Keep that in mind and check out some of the great work done by Monica Dinculescu, Zach Leatherman or this incredible article by Helen Homes. Variable Fonts & Animations Because variable fonts can have an interpolated range of values we can leverage the flexibility and interactive nature of the web. Rather than using SVG, videos or JavaScript to accomplish these effects, we can create animations or transitions using real text, and we can do this using techniques we may already be familiar with. This means we can have editable, selectable, searchable, copy-pastable text, which is accessible via a screenreader. Grass Variable Font Demo Growing Grass Variable Font Text. Demo on Codepen. This effect is achieved using a font called Decovar, by David Berlow. To achieve the animation effect we only need a couple of things to get started. First, we set up the font-family and make use of the new property font-variation-settings to access the different axes available in Decovar. h1 { font-family: "Decovar"; font-variation-settings: 'INLN' 1000, 'SWRM' 1000; } For this effect, we use two custom axis – the first is called “inline” and is represented by the code INLI and the second is “skeleton worm” represented by the code SWRM. For both axes, the maximum value is 1000 and the minimum value is 0. For this effect, we’ll make the most of the full axis range. Once we have the base set up, we can create the animation. There are a number of ways to animate variable fonts. In this demo, we’ll use CSS keyframe animations and the font-variation-settings property, but you can also use CSS transitions and JavaScript as well. The code below will start with the “leaves” expanded and then shrink back until it disappears. @keyframes grow { 0% { font-variation-settings: 'INLN' 1000, 'SWRM' 1000; } 100% { font-variation-settings: 'INLN' 1000, 'SWRM' 0; } } Once we have created the keyframes we can add the animation to the h1 element, and that is the last piece needed in order to create the animation. h1 { font-family: "Decovar"; font-variation-settings: 'INLN' 1000, 'SWRM' 1000; animation: grow 4s linear alternate infinite; } What this demonstrates is that typically, to accomplish effects like this, the heavy lifting is done by the font. We really only need a few lines of CSS for the animation, which if you think about it, is pretty incredible. There are all sorts of interesting, creative applications of variable fonts, and a lot of incredible fonts you can make the most of. Whether you want to create that “hand-writing” effect that we often see represented with SVG, or something a little different, there are a lot of different options. Duos Writer: Hand Writing Demo of hand writing variable font, Duos Writer by Underware. Decovar: Disappearing Text See the Pen CSS-only variable font demo using Decovar Regular by Mandy Michael (@mandymichael) on CodePen. Cheee: Snow Text Snow Text Effect - Text fills up with snow and gets “heavier” at the bottom as more snow gathers. Featuring “Cheee” by OhNoTypeCo. View on Codepen. Variable Fonts, Media Queries and Customisation It’s not that these are just beautiful or cool effects, what they demonstrate is that as developers and designers we can now control the font itself and that that means is that variable fonts allow typography on the web to adapt to the flexible nature of our screens, environments and devices. We can even make use of different CSS media queries to provide more control over our designs based on environments, light contrast and colour schemes. Though the CSS Media Queries Level 5 Spec is still in draft stages, we can experiment with the prefers-color-scheme (also known as dark mode) media query right now! Dark Mode featuring Oozing Cheee by OhNoTypeCo Oozing Dark Mode Text featuring “Cheee” by OhNoTypeCo. View Demo on Codepen. The above example uses a font called “Cheee” by OhNoTypeCo and demonstrates how to make use of a CSS Transition and the prefers-color-scheme media query to transition the axis of a variable font. h1 { font-family: “Cheee" font-variation-settings: "TEMP" 0; transition: all 4s linear; } @media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) { h1 { font-variation-settings: "TEMP" 1000; } } Dark mode isn’t just about changing the colours, it’s important to consider things like weight as well. It’s the combination of the weight, colour and size of a font that determines how legible and accessible it is for the user. In the example above, I’m creating a fun effect – but more practically, dark mode allows us to modify the contrast and styles to ensure better legibility and usability in different environments. What is even more exciting about variable fonts in this context is that if developers and designers can have this finer control over our fonts to create more legible, accessible text, it also means the user has access to this as well. As a result, users that create their own stylesheets to customise the experience to their specific requirements, can now adjust the pages font weight, width or other available axis to what best suits them. Providing users with this kind of flexibility is such an incredible opportunity that we have never had before! As CSS develops, we’ll have access to different environmental and system features that allow us to take advantage of our users unique circumstances. We can start to design our typography to adjust to things like screen width - which might allow us to tweak the font weight, width, optical size or other axes to be more readable on smaller or larger screens. Where the viewport is wide we can have more detail, when its smaller in a more confined space we might look at reducing the width of the font—this helps to maintain the integrity of the design as the viewport gets smaller or, to fit text into a particular space. See the Pen CSS is Awesome - Variable fonts Edition. by Mandy Michael (@mandymichael) on CodePen. We have all been in the situation where we just need the text to be slightly narrower to fit within the available space. If you use a variable font with a width axis you can slightly modify the width to adjust to the space available, and do so in a way that the font was designed to do, rather than using things like letter spacing which doesn’t consider the kerning of the characters. Variable Fonts, JavaScript and Interactive Effects We can take these concepts even further and mix in a little JavaScript to make use of a whole suite of different interactions, events, sensors and apis. The best part about this is whether you are using device orientation, light sensors, viewport resizes, scroll events or mouse movement, the base JavaScript doesn’t really change. To demonstrate this, we’ll use a straightforward example – we’ll match our font weight to the size of our viewport – as the viewport gets smaller, the font weight gets heavier. Demo: As the viewport width changes, the weight of the text “Jello” becomes heavier. We’ll start off by setting our base values. We need to define the minimum and maximum axis values for the font weight, and the minimum and maximum event range, in this case the viewport size. Basically we’re defining the start and end points for both the font and the event. // Font weight axis range const minAxisValue = 200 const maxAxisValue = 900 // Viewport range const minEventValue = 320px const maxEventValue = 1440px Next we determine the current viewport width, which we can access with something like window.innerWidth. // Current viewport width const windowWidth = window.innerWidth Using the current viewport width value, we create the new scale for the viewport, so rather than the pixels values we convert it to a range of 0 - 0.99. const windowSize = (windowWidth - minEventValue) / (maxEventValue - minEventValue) // Outputs a value from 0 - 0.99 We then take that new viewport decimal value and use it to determine the font weight based on viewport scale. const fontWeight = windowSize * (minAxisValue - maxAxisValue) + maxAxisValue; // Outputs a value from 200 - 900 including decimal places This final value is what we use to update our CSS. You can do this however you want – lately I like to use CSS Custom Properties. This will pass the newly calculated font weight value into our CSS and update the weight as needed. // JavaScript p.style.setProperty("--weight", fontWeight); Finally, we can put all this inside a function and inside an event listener for window resize. You can modify this however you need to in order to improve performance, but in essence, this is all you need to achieve the desired outcome. function fluidAxisVariation() { // Current viewport width const windowWidth = window.innerWidth // Get new scales for viewport and font weight const viewportScale = (windowWidth - 320) / (1440 - 320); const fontWeightScale = viewportScale * (200 - 900) + 900; // Set in CSS using CSS Custom Property p.style.setProperty("--weight", fontWeightScale); } window.addEventListener("resize", fluidAxisVariation); You can apply this to single elements, or multiple. In this case, I’m changing the paragraph font weights and different rates, but also reducing the width axis of the headline so it doesn’t wrap onto multiple lines. As previously mentioned, this code can be used to create all sorts of really amazing, interesting effects. All that’s required is passing in different event and axis values. In the following example, I’m using mouse position events to change the direction and rotation of the stretchy slinky effect provided by the font “Whoa” by Scribble Tone. See the Pen Slinky Text - WHOA Variable font demo by Mandy Michael (@mandymichael) on CodePen. We can also take the dark mode/colour schemes idea further by making use of the Ambient Light Sensor to modify the font to be more legible and readable in low light environments. This effect uses Tiny by Jack Halten Fahnestock from Velvetyne Type Foundry and demonstrates how we modify our text based by query the characteristics of the user’s display or light-level, sound or other sensors. It’s only because Variable fonts give us more control over each of these elements that we can fine-tune the font characteristics to maximise the legibility, readability and overall accessibility of our website text. And while these examples might seem trivial, they are great demonstrations of the possibilities. This is a level of control over our fonts and text that is unprecedented. Using device orientation to change the scale and weight of individual characters. View on Codepen. Variable Fonts offer a new world of interactivity, usability and accessibility, but they are still a new technology. This means we have the opportunity to figure out how and what we can achieve with them. From where I stand, the possibilities are endless, so don’t be limited by what we can already do – the web is still young and there is so much for us to create. Variable fonts open up doors that never existed before and they give us an opportunity to think more creatively about how we can create better experiences for our users. At the very least, we can improve the performance of our websites, but at best, we can make more usable, more accessible, and more meaningful content - and that, is what gets me really excited about the future of web typography with variable fonts. About the author Mandy is a community organiser, speaker, and developer working as the Front End Development Manager at Seven West Media in Western Australia. She is a co-organiser and Director of Mixin Conf, and the founder and co-organiser of Fenders, a local meetup for front-end developers providing events, mentoring and support to the Perth web community. Mandy’s passion is CSS, HTML and JS and hopes to inspire that passion in others. She loves the supportive and collaborative nature of the web and strives to encourage this environment through the community groups she is a part of. Her aim is to create a community of web developers who can share, mentor, learn and grow together. More articles by Mandy Full Article Code Design typography
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