native-font

0.2.0 • Public • Published

native-font

Native font stacks for web wizards

About

This library intends to help you make use of native font stacks on the web.

It comes bundled with 75 pre-defined fonts. But don't worry! You only ship to the browser what you need. And these are native fonts, so there won't be any downloading of font files. It's just the definitions needed to use the fonts that are pre-installed on the end user machine.

Install

npm install --save-dev native-font

Include

mixins

@use "native-font";

.some-rule {
  @include native-font.variables();
}

fonts

@use "native-font/arial";
@use "native-font/arial-black";
@use "native-font/courier-new";

Use

Lets first look at how to apply a font to your text and cover how to define a set of fonts and output the styles later.

Apply a font

You apply a font by assigning a CSS variable to the font-family property of the element(s) you want to style. For example:

<p>Text in my font</p>
p {
  font-family: var(--arial);
}

This would assign the font arial to the text in the p element. The CSS variable name --arial can be easily derived from the name of the font. For example, for Arial Black it would be --arial-black and for Segoe UI it would be --segoe-ui.

Now lets look at how to define a set of fonts and output the styles for it.

Define a set of fonts

To define a set of fonts, you can use sass (recommended), or you can use a predefined set,

Use sass

With sass you can automatically build up the font set as you @use fonts in your code:

// load the 'arial' font
@use "native-font/arial";
// load more fonts if you need
// a dependency tree is created automatically

Dependencies are automatically resolved because each font actually @uses the fonts it depends on and whenever a font is used for the first time, it is added to the set.

Font stacks list the most specific fonts first, then less specific fonts as fallbacks for when the most specific font is not available. For example, the font stack for Arial might look something like Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif, which means so much as 'use Arial, but if that is not available, use Helvetica. If that too is not available, use any sans-serif font'. So it makes sense to think of fonts as 'deriving' from generic fonts. And that is exactly what this library does. That is also why the predefined sets start with the most generic fonts like serif, sans-serif and monospace first and we only add the more specific fonts later. Because those fonts actually build on top of the more generic fonts in the stack.

Use a predefined set

There are also some predefined sets available that you can load:

  • w3c: The family names defined by the World Wide Web Consortium
  • base: The w3C fonts plus 3 extra generic names
  • `modern: A set of modern web fonts
  • `cssfonts: The web-safe fonts we know and love
  • all: The complete set of all of the above

You can load a set of fonts by @useing the set like this:

@use "native-font/sets/modern"

You still have to output the styles for the set.

Or, you can load these predefined sets by importing the CSS stylesheet:

@import 'native-font/sets/modern.css';

This already includes the styles so you don't have to output them yourself.

When you go the CSS route, you can also select the minified version:

@import 'native-font/sets/modern.min.css';

Output the styles

Once we have defined the set of fonts we want to use, we need to output the styles for them. That is actually as simple as this:

// load native-font mixins
@use "native-font";
// load fonts
@use "native-font/arial";
// output the styles
:root, ::backdrop {
  // render the CSS variables
  @include native-font.variables();
}

Outputs:

:root, ::backdrop {
  --color-emoji: "Apple Color Emoji", "Segoe UI Emoji", "Segoe UI Symbol", "Noto Color Emoji";
  --sans-serif: "Helvetica Neue", "Arial Nova", "Nimbus Sans", Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif, var(--color-emoji);
  --arial: "Arial Nova", Arial, "Helvetica Neue", Helvetica, var(--sans-serif);
}

As you can see, you actually get 3 variables. This font stack defines an extra generic font name for color-emoji and makes it the fallback for the other generic fonts, in order to improve emoji support across devices. The generic fonts themselves are also defined as font stacks, which is why we get sans-serif defined here as well. Because that is the fallback for arial, the font we actually selected.

Available fonts (by set)

w3c

@use "native-font/sets/w3c";

Contains 14 fonts (± 1.4kB, ~800 bytes gzipped):

base

@use "native-font/sets/base";

Contains 17 fonts (± 1.5kB, ~840 bytes gzipped), all 14 from w3c, plus these 3:

  • emojicon
  • ui-emoji
  • ui-emojicon

modern

scss

@use "native-font/sets/modern";

Contains 28 fonts (± 2.6kB, ~1.2kB gzipped), all 17 from base, plus these 11:

cssfonts

scss

@use "native-font/sets/cssfonts";

Contains 64 fonts (± 5.3kB, ~1.8kB gzipped), all 17 from base, plus these 47:

all

scss

@use "native-font/sets/all";

Contains 75 fonts: (± 6.4kB, ~2.0kB gzipped)

About the extra fonts in base

The base font set adds three extra font names to the set defined by w3c. Here is the reasoning behind these additions.

ui-emoji

Traditionally, the standard font names defined by w3c, such as sans-serif, are used as fallbacks in font stacks to indicate the type of family of font we would like to get when the main font is not available. The standard font emoji fits in this category of fallback fonts. However, recently we have seen a desire amongst web designers to communicate the intention of 'give us the font that the host system uses for UI'. So instead of trying to specify in generic terms which fallback font we want, we would like to say quitte specifically actually that we want 'the ui font'. so we are not talking about a fallback scenario here. And indeed we tend to specify fonts like system-ui and ui-monospace at the start of the font stack, instead of at the end.

For this reason I find it strange that there is no ui-emoji, even though we did get ui-serif, ui-sans-serif and ui-monospace. Just like with the other ui-* fonts, ui-emoji would be intended to say 'the font the host system UI uses for emoji', instead of the much more generic 'a font intended for emoji'. So base adds ui-emoji for completeness.

emojicon

Emojis are somewhat of an oddity amongst the other characters and symbols, because normally characters are not colored by themselves. Text is usually monochrome in nature and we apply color via CSS rules like color: green;. However Emoji are different. These characters often do get colors and usually don't respond to the color CSS rule. Icon fonts on the other hand use the fact that characters usually are monochrome and only get color through CSS to allow designers to display the same icon in many different colors just like they can do with text.

Noto Emoji is a recent example of a font that specifically adresses this, by offering all the Unicode emoji as monochrome icons that can be colored by CSS rules.

I think it would be convenient to be able to express the idea of 'icons based on emoji'. Its not just an emoji font. Its an emoji font specifically for icons. Hence the contraction emojicon. i wrote a blog post about this idea and I am taking the liberty of introucing it in this library in the hope that other developers will be able to build on it so we can work towards portable icons on the web together.

emojicon-ui

The font the host OS uses for displaying emojicon. Adding this font seems like the consistent choice to make. Don't expect too much in terms of support but it is here and we can tune it in the future.

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    npm i native-font

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    Version

    0.2.0

    License

    MIT

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    Total Files

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    Collaborators

    • stijndewitt