Using fractional em's in CSS's font-size property

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小蘑菇
小蘑菇 2020-12-15 23:27

Say, I have the following CSS rule defined:

.className {
font-size:0.89em;
}

My question is, how \"deep\" into fractions can I go while spe

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  • 2020-12-16 00:14

    It should be kept in mind though, that fractional em values, like all floating point numbers, are susceptible to rounding error.

    I found that out while setting my media query boundaries, where one max-width was 0.00001em away from another min-width, and it was rounded up and both queries were activated. After changing the difference to 0.001em the queries worked as expected, exclusively.

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  • 2020-12-16 00:28

    JohnB is right. We're still rendering in pixels whatever the size unit we use, and small changes in ems will not change the displayed size:

    For example, for text originally displaying at a height of 20px*, we can see that there is no effective change when a rule is added to make it .99em of its original height:

    20 * 0.99 = 19.8 
    

    The browser can't display .8 of a pixel, so (assuming it will round up) it will still display it as 20px high.

    Though it appears that browsers do not always round off as expected:

    http://meyerweb.com/eric/thoughts/2010/02/10/rounding-off/

    http://ejohn.org/blog/sub-pixel-problems-in-css/

    *Yep, I know a font-size of 20px doesn't alway mean it's displayed at 20px!

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