Courier New is a bad font that no one should choose to use. In typical font-weight terms, where Regular should be 400, it’s 200–250, because it was improperly digitised, not taking ink bleed into account. Windows put some hacks into ClearType to make it render a little less badly, but they’re not dependable these days.
(“Courier”, as provided by macOS, is fine. But Courier New is irredeemably bad.)
Concerning font-family declarations, if you’re doing something like `"Courier New", Courier, monospace`—please just write `monospace`.
Beauty /is/ in the eye of the beholder. The rationale /here/ is that the more text in a page the more code you'll fit in your head the more you'll get done, the more confidence you'll have and again the more you'll achieve.
The predominant monitor in existence is your average 24" 1080p monitor, sat at, on average, 32" away from the head. The average person has worse than 20/20 vision.
You must test your website in such conditions and make sure it is readable, and also make sure it meets at minimum WCAG A, but preferably the whole way to AAA if possible.
Thank you but the predominant monitor's probably a smartphone. The average professional is probably using a 4k monitor at the moment.
Everything in the free documentation I've provided you out of my own time and money that you're referring to exists in relation to the other elements in that page, so to get the experience you're after simply ctrl+scroll and change the CSS zoom level like the riot at parties that you could be or catch up with circa 2013-2014 and invest in a 4k display please.
"Zoom in" or "buy a different monitor" is not an appropriate response to people bringing up the plethora of objective & subjective a11y issues on the page.
If you really don't care about providing an accessible experience, try this: no one will use the tool if they can't read the docs. With my monitor and eyesight, it's entirely illegible.
1kloc is a bit abstract ; it seems you are in a great position to give a true bundled weight ; preact is about 3kb which is my fav for years - good job for the effort and results !
We could remove 3kb by removing the router but that's not gonna happen.
You're more than welcome to minify+brotli it yourself if you use vertex.js in production.
React components might eventually be removed in favor of making the templating system as fast and as elegant as possible but for the time being they provide flexibility.
A bit surprised to see a new framework boasting to ship as UMD. Are developers still using commonjs? I'm sure some continue to CDN inject libraries. But even then ESM is well supported.
Yes, and every other flavor too. "Developers" isn't a single hive-mind entity, and there are many different purposes for javascript, and many different kinds of systems where javascript can be used.
I was going to say that font is unreadable, but its Courier New.
By my own extensive testing[1], it's optimal at minimum 18px, you're at 13.5px.
[1]: https://github.com/Diablo-D3/dotfiles/blob/master/fontsizes....
Courier New is a bad font that no one should choose to use. In typical font-weight terms, where Regular should be 400, it’s 200–250, because it was improperly digitised, not taking ink bleed into account. Windows put some hacks into ClearType to make it render a little less badly, but they’re not dependable these days.
(“Courier”, as provided by macOS, is fine. But Courier New is irredeemably bad.)
Concerning font-family declarations, if you’re doing something like `"Courier New", Courier, monospace`—please just write `monospace`.
(I’m not going to address the font size.)
Beauty /is/ in the eye of the beholder. The rationale /here/ is that the more text in a page the more code you'll fit in your head the more you'll get done, the more confidence you'll have and again the more you'll achieve.
Zero code is in your head if you can't read it.
The predominant monitor in existence is your average 24" 1080p monitor, sat at, on average, 32" away from the head. The average person has worse than 20/20 vision.
You must test your website in such conditions and make sure it is readable, and also make sure it meets at minimum WCAG A, but preferably the whole way to AAA if possible.
Thank you but the predominant monitor's probably a smartphone. The average professional is probably using a 4k monitor at the moment.
Everything in the free documentation I've provided you out of my own time and money that you're referring to exists in relation to the other elements in that page, so to get the experience you're after simply ctrl+scroll and change the CSS zoom level like the riot at parties that you could be or catch up with circa 2013-2014 and invest in a 4k display please.
"Zoom in" or "buy a different monitor" is not an appropriate response to people bringing up the plethora of objective & subjective a11y issues on the page.
If you really don't care about providing an accessible experience, try this: no one will use the tool if they can't read the docs. With my monitor and eyesight, it's entirely illegible.
OP has a valid point. On my Mac, it's unreadable without zooming in. I immediately left the page.
Thanks for the valuable feedback. I've added a mediaquery for your use case. This should be more legible now: https://lukeb42.github.io/vertex-manual.html
Send me a screenshot via https://catbox.moe if it's unreadable and I'll get this done and dusted before leaving the thread. Thanks.
1kloc is a bit abstract ; it seems you are in a great position to give a true bundled weight ; preact is about 3kb which is my fav for years - good job for the effort and results !
9kb (minifier+brotli)
We could remove 3kb by removing the router but that's not gonna happen. You're more than welcome to minify+brotli it yourself if you use vertex.js in production.
Huh, interesting... why have both React components and Mustache-style templates in the same framework? They perform the same function?
What's the use case for mixing them?
React components might eventually be removed in favor of making the templating system as fast and as elegant as possible but for the time being they provide flexibility.
You can read https://lukeb42.github.io/vertex-interop.html for more info.
A bit surprised to see a new framework boasting to ship as UMD. Are developers still using commonjs? I'm sure some continue to CDN inject libraries. But even then ESM is well supported.
>Are developers still using commonjs?
Yes, and every other flavor too. "Developers" isn't a single hive-mind entity, and there are many different purposes for javascript, and many different kinds of systems where javascript can be used.
Would you prefer to see ESM or neither?
Annoyingly there's already a framework called Vert.x for JVM but there's also Vert.x Node.js