Here we are going to discuss about the animation for frame based animation we stack our animation frames vertically and some things which are related heights should be defined in pixels but now all that has changed it is possible to compensate for different sizes of a text in animation with few modifications according to our image design principles and code, in the animation the size of frames need not be the same as elements, all the animation will be stalked vertically but for the best accessibility stalking frames horizontally would have been
Some time ago, font tags offered a web developer’s only ways of editing HTML content for appearance of web explorers for instance Microsoft Internet Explorer, Opera or Firefox.
The issue with such tags was these fonts were not only disreputably untrustworthy for providing any known type of details in the way originally proposed by its creator. They also increased file sizes to about unendurable proportions. Moreover, the content size setting of explorer might create a page’s matter overlap or turn into badly written in some additional
"HTML5 (also sometimes referred to as Web Applications 1.0) is a technology developed by the WHATWG, an open community started by three of the four major browser vendors: Mozilla, Opera, and Apple. HTML5 is not so much a replacement for HTML 4.01 or XHTML 1.0 as it is an upgrade or evolution. It aims for backwards compatibility, tries to remove undefined behavior in HTML 4.01 by defining it, and looks at the various browsers’ tag-soup parsing behavior to try to define the best solution that doesn’t break the web. At the same time, it adds sorely
"For frame based animation, we will stack our animation frames vertically, and some sizes related to height should be defined in pixels, that's not condsidered good in terms of accessibility indeed as Internet Explorer users cannot change the sizes of fonts defined in pixels, but we need it for the simplicity of the tutorial. Stacking frames horizontally and setting the vertical positions to 50% would be "awesome", but Opera has a bug I'll explain later.
However, it is still possible to compensate for different sizes of text in animation with few
Imagine this: overnight, the W3C makes CSS3 a standard, and the browsers end their differences (IE included) and support everything in CSS3. How will this affect you? What magical things that CSS3 offers will bring your webpages to life?
For instance, CSS3 gives us cross–browser opacity, standardized Image Replacement (via display: icon), and automatic box and text shadows, not to mention being able to control the resizing of a window through CSS. And there’s a lot more where that came from.
But then you wake up and realize that complete