Correcting the Line Length
I asked this morning what I can improve on jskatas.org. Daniel answered with something that I can apply to picostitch too: use the "correct line length". He pointed me to practicaltypography.com which states:
Overly long lines are a common problem, but theyβre easy to correct. Shorter lines will make a big difference in the legibility and professionalism of your layout. [...]
Shorter lines are more comfortable to read than longer lines. [...]
Aim for an average line length of 45β90 characters, including spaces.
Sounds easy, just do width: 80rem
right? Should be fixed when you read this π.
The site also states
Newspaper columns are very tall, so they also have to be very narrow to make vertical tracking easy.
To be honest, I have been thinking about that a lot before, but never thought of it to be such an issue until today, when I got that response twice that I should limit the page width of the jskatas.org site. So I acted right away, since this seems to be important to people. I still want to make sure to not waste too much space on people's wide screens. Wouldn't it be an aweful waste of space? Now I will just think the other way around, I make the side narrower and will think about how to use the whitespace. So I flip the priorities.
A Note on practicaltypography.com
Since these notes are just for me, I have to note the following: on the practicaltypography.com page the first kinda table "How to use Word Count" confused me totally. It took me a while to understand what it was for. On the left it said "Word", "Mac OS Word" and "Pages" and I had no idea what was meant. They also used < and > for menu items that I should click. I had to read the table three times until I understood what it was. I didn't expect that on a site that teaches me about what my site should look like. Surprise.
I also missed headlines on that page, which I learned in
Don't make me think
make reading easier.
I don't mean to rant. I am just writing down my observations and learnings, reflecting on them.
Reading through other sites like Block Quotations and Page Margins on practicaltypography.com, I see that not all sources agree on everything, I don't understand inches well enough and not everything makes sense to me. Also I see some rules from "Don't make me think" are not applied on his page. So in the end, I still have to think, hehe.
Thanks for free resource and the learnings @Matthew Butterick!