We take web fonts for granted these days. We didn’t always have the option of setting our text in almost any typeface. I mean, we could, but then we’d have to sigh and say, “Well, that’ll look good on about five people’s computers. Hope everyone else likes Verdana!”
Web fonts brought some much needed variety to the seen, a few abuses of typography, some extra page weight as the fonts themselves were loaded, and flashes of unstyled or invisible text. Well… omelette, eggs, breaking, you get the idea. It was bound to happen. [pullquote]If users are stuck looking at a blank page for too long they might just decide to leave[/pullquote] It’s a bit of a usability problem, though, when text is invisible until the custom font gets loaded. If users are stuck looking at a blank page for too long (and too long might be milliseconds) they might just decide to leave. And that’s fair enough. It’s not user-friendly. Fast forward a few years, and we’re making progress on controlling the way fonts load. Until now, we’ve done it with third-party libraries and APIs. But now, at last, this functionality is coming to CSS. Enter the font-display property. It’s currently only in Opera, Opera for Android, and Chrome. (It was first introduced in Chrome 49 as an experimental feature.) It comes with four options: auto, swap, fallback, and optional. Basically, choosing font-display: auto will leave the browser to act as it does now. Text will be invisible until the custom font loads. swap is probably what most people will use. If the font isn’t loaded, the next available font defined in the font-family property will be used. When the web font loads, it will be replaced. This is basically a flash of unstyled content, but that’s more user-friendly than invisible content, I think. fallback splits the difference between those first two options. For a delay of 100 milliseconds, the text will be invisible. If the custom font is loaded by then, it will be used. If not, the next font in the line of succession will rule until the custom font is loaded. [pullquote]optional works like fallback, except the browser may decide not to load the custom font at all, if the user’s connection is too slow[/pullquote] optional works like fallback, except the browser may decide not to load the custom font at all, if the user’s connection is too slow. And there we have it. Mind you, the display-font is meant to be used in a @font-face declaration. That means it won’t work with third-party font providers like Typekit or Google Fonts for now. Once font-display becomes more widespread, however, it’s likely that they’ll implement some sort of option for this feature.Ezequiel Bruni
Ezequiel Bruni is a web/UX designer, blogger, and aspiring photographer living in Mexico. When he’s not up to his finely-chiselled ears in wire-frames and front-end code, or ranting about the same, he indulges in beer, pizza, fantasy novels, and stand-up comedy.
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