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  1. Review: HTML and CSS Web Standards Solutions

    HTML and CSS Web Standards Solutions (A Web Standardista’s Approach) by Christopher Murphy and Nicklas Persson

    I’m so glad that this book exists. I’ve been hoping someone would write a book almost exactly like this for a long time. I have to be honest, when I first heard about it I sighed a little. Part of it was the word ‘standardistas’ in the title which made me wince a bit. The other part was wondering if this wasn’t just another book to add to the pantheon of web standards texts that have been published in the last few years. Yes, cynical, I know. However, I was wrong. After being approached by one of the authors, the publishers, Friends of Ed, kindly sent me a review copy. It took me a long while to get around to reading it after the carnage of the last few months, but I can honestly say that HTML and CSS Web Standards Solution: A Web Standardistas’ Approach is excellent.

    The authors are Christopher Murphy and Nicklas Persson — both lecturers in interactive design at the University of Ulster. As they make clear in the introduction, they wanted to:

    …cover everything our students needed to embark on a well-grounded, web standards-based approach in one package: namely, a solid foundation in XHTML coupled with a comprehensive introduction to CSS.

    That’s exactly what they’ve done. Here’s two reasons from my own experience why I think it’s so important:

    1. A long time ago, a film editor friend of mine who moved to Bristol found scant local opportunities. (It’s a very nepotistic world.) I knew a web editor job was coming open in a few weeks time. It would only require entry-level HTML and CSS skill. Almost on a whim I suggested he do a crash course in the basics then work next to me in my office. So, for a week, he read everything I directed him to on the Web, did some basic tutorials, and soon after got the job. Using me as a kind of organic bookshelf to solve problems, he quickly became self-sufficient. Today he earns his bread coding HTML and CSS daily into beautiful, accessible, commercial web sites.
    2. Sometime later, I was interviewing students for an entry-level job. By far the most disappointing aspect of their portfolios was the web design elements. They could write HTML, apply CSS, but were missing what I consider core principles that underpin everything we do. Things like a knowledge of plain old semantic HTML, some understanding of accessibility, and the basics of web typography.

    Both examples made me realise that there was something missing amongst the excellent, but often niche or advanced books we know and love. We needed a starter kit, a crash course in basics. That’s the book that Christopher Murphy and Nicklas Persson have written. HTML and CSS Web Standards Solutions is the missing primer of web design.

    In an industry where much of the critical knowledge has been researched and published by self-taught designers, and design schools have traditionally lagged behind (inevitably doing a disservice to their students) this book does what all good teachers do: teaches people the core skills and gives them the knowledge to continue learning.

    It would be easy to dismiss the detail in the book as entry-level, or incomplete. I could debate resetting body font size to 10px using ems, or grids, or XHTML versus HTML. However, to do so would be missing the point completely. The authors have successfully navigated a huge range of passionately held opinions to present good, solid, core knowledge in an entirely practical format. The common denominators they impart will enable students to be discerning later on when they stumble across niche techniques that can range from brilliant, to totally useless. Those who start with this text may well find it useful later when trying to understand how a technique can be appropriate and superb to use in one context, and awful in another.

    Every design school on the planet should make HTML and CSS Web Standards Solutions a required textbook. As well as a perfect primer for students, there’s many a formally-trained graphic designer, or self-taught web designer, who might find it useful. I recommend it to you. Careful, though, some people may find themselves arguing the finer points of web typography or debating DOCTYPEs faster than they think.

    Further reading

    1. Companion web site: webstandardistas.com
    2. @standardistas on Twitter
    3. Publisher’s (Friend of Ed) blurb
    4. HTML and CSS Web Standards Solutions: A Web Standardistas’ Approach on Amazon (associates link)

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  2. Review: Detail in Typography by Jost Hochuli

    Detail in Typography by Jost Hochuli (Hyphen Press, 2008)

    The day was only two hours old. It already felt ancient. I was writing proposals in my little office at home. The snick of the letterbox broke the tedium. A package had arrived!

    Package from Typotheque

    Inside was an array of delights from Typotheque: Specimen No. 5 of their History project, specimen books for Brioni and Greta, and last but not least, the revised edition of Detail in Typography by renowned book designer, Jost Hochuli. Nice!

    Detail in Typography was first published in 1987 in German. The translation was released this year by Hyphen Press. It discusses ‘microtypography’ — the fundamentals of legibility; everything from how we read, to analyses of letters, words, lines, linespacing, texture, and the qualities of type. In the first chapter, Basics, Jost Hochuli writes:

    ‘These are the components that graphic designers like to neglect, as they fall outside the area that is normally considered as “creative”.’

    The writing is beautifully tight. It’s 61 pages long including references and notes. Almost every chapter has rich examples lighting up the prose, which is crisp — a credit to both the author, and the translator, Charles Whitehouse.

    What I loved about it was the soft tone. No bombastic dogma, but an insightful discourse into the details of legiblity. The second chapter introduces saccades or saccadic eye motion; the science behind how we read and understand words. From that moment I was hooked. Re-reading it when writing this, I’m hard-pressed to find highlights. Every chapter is a highlight. Perhaps two points that stood out for me are:

    1. Hochuli explores how research shows that people don’t always need to see the whole letter in order to read the word: ‘the upper half of the letter is sufficient’ — ‘this would put most sanserif faces, and particularly those with the simple form of a, at a dissadvantage against classic book types’.
    2. He also explores what he terms ‘optical facts’ as opposed to optical illusions. How, when certain mathematically precise forms like circles and squares are components of type, they distort the letterform, and therefore the word, line, and the texture.

    I found the typesetting and presentation of the book a little awkward. I found the quality of print discordant with the quality of prose. Some lines are interrupted by a page spread or verso of examples. It’s beautiful in content, but not necessarily in design.

    Inside Detail in Typography by Jost Hochuli

    Any minor criticisms I have do not detract from the superb content. The relationship between cognitive science and microtypography is precisely drawn. It inadvertently demonstrates just how far typesetting on the Web has to go before some of the aspects of fine typography can shine. I found myself constantly wondering what it would take to apply the principals on the Web with CSS; for that alone, it was a great read.

    Detail in Typography is available direct from Hyphen, or from Typotheque with specimens as part of their package, and ineviatbly, lots of other places.

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