Roel Nieskens on Nostr: If a webfont doesn't support a character that's on the page, the browser will go down ...
If a webfont doesn't support a character that's on the page, the browser will go down its internal font stack until it finds a fallback font to render that character.
I thought this meant you could never see a webfont's .notdef "tofu" glyph.
But TIL that if you use a Private Use Area unicode value, the browser will try to render it in the first webfont on the stack, and if it can't, use *that webfont's* .notdef instead.
#typography #css
I thought this meant you could never see a webfont's .notdef "tofu" glyph.
But TIL that if you use a Private Use Area unicode value, the browser will try to render it in the first webfont on the stack, and if it can't, use *that webfont's* .notdef instead.
#typography #css