Multimedia Making It Work Chapter2 - Text

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Chapter 2

Text
Overview
Importance of text in a multimedia
presentation.
Understanding fonts and typefaces.
Using text elements in a multimedia
presentation.
Computers and text.
Font editing and design tools.
Multimedia and hypertext.
Using Text in Multimedia
Type terminology
Typeface
Arial
Courier
Times
Fonts
Points
Styles
Leading
Kerning
Fonts and Faces
A typeface is a family of graphic characters
that includes many type sizes and styles
(such as Times, Arial, Helvetica)

A font is a collection of characters of a


single size and style belonging to a
typeface family (such as bold, italic)

Font sizes are in points 1 point = 1/72 inch


(measured from top to bottom of descenders in capital letter)
X-height is the height of the lower case
letter x
Character Metrics
Leading and Kerning
Computers can
adjust the line spacing (called
leading)
leading
and
the space between pairs of letters,
called kerning
Using Text In Multimedia
WYSIWYG - What you see is what
you get!
Aim for a balance between too much
text and too little
Make web pages no more than
1 to 2 screenfuls of text
Bring the user to the destination with
as few actions as possible
Menus For Navigation
A Multimedia project or web site
should include:
content or information
navigation tools such as menus, mouse
clicks, key presses or touch screen
some indication or map of where the
user is in the presentation
Buttons for Interaction
Buttons are objects that make things
happen when they are clicked
Use common button shapes and
sizes
Label them clearly
BE SURE THEY WORK!
Fields for Reading
Reading from a computer screen is
slower than from a book
People blink 3-5 times/minute, using
a computer and 20-25 times/minute
reading a book
This reduced eye movement causes
fatigue, dryness
Try to present only a few paragraphs
per page
Portrait vs. Landscape
Monitor use wider-than-tall aspect
ratios called landscape
Most books use taller-than- wide
orientation, called portrait
Dont try to shrink a full page onto a
monitor

landscape
portrait
HTML Documents
Standard document format on the web is
called Hypertext Markup Language ( HTML)
Originally designed for text not multimedia
- now being redesigned as Dynamic HTML
( DHTML), which uses CSS (Cascading
Style sheets) and permits defining text
choices.
Specify typefaces, sizes colors and
properties by marking up the text with
tags (such as <B>, </B>)
HTML Documents
The Font tag is used to specify the
font to be displayed (if present)

<font face = Verdana, Arial, Times>

If those fonts are not on the system,


the default is used ( see p. 55-57 for
common fonts)
Symbols and Icons
Symbols act like visual words to
convey meaning, (called icons)
MAC - trash can
Windows - hourglass
Icons and sound are more easily
remembered than words
It is useful to label icons for clarity
See smileys in textbook (p. 61)
Animating Text
To grab a viewers attention:
let text fly onto screen
rotate or spin text, etc.
Use special effects sparingly or they
become boring
Computers and Text
Mac standard - 72 pixels/ inch
PC - VGA - 96 pixels/inch
Screen ( 640 pixels across x 480
down, called 640 x480 resolution)
Today much higher resolution
possible
Fonts Wars
Apple - Adobe PostScript page description
font language
describes an image in terms of
mathematical constructs (Bezier curves)
Can be scaled larger or smaller
Currently > 6,000 typefaces available
Apple & Microsoft created TrueType
Computers and Text
Allow text to be drawn at any size without
jaggies, by anti-aliasing the edges of the
characters
Fonts and Characters
Fonts smaller than 12 point are not
very legible on a monitor
Never assume the fonts installed on your
computer are on all computers
Stay with TrueType fonts ordinarily
ASCII character set - most common
Extended Character set - used for HTML
UNICODE supports characters for all
known languages
Unicode
Developed in 1989 for multilingual text
Contains 65,000 characters form all known
languages and alphabets
Where several languages share a set of
symbols, they are grouped into a
collection called scripts ( eg. Latin,
Arabic, Cyrillic, Greek, Tibetan, etc.)
Shared symbols are unified into
collections called scripts
Unicode
Numbers
Mathematical symbols
Punctuation
Arrows, blocks and drawing shapes
Technical symbols
Mapping Text Across Platforms
Viewing a presentation on either MAC
and PC reveals differences
Fonts must be mapped from one
machine to another
If same font doesnt exist on the other
machine, one is substituted
( called font substitution)
To avoid this, convert to bitmaps
Representing Languages
Some contain different symbols
Others represent an entire concept
with a single symbol (as in some
Asian languages)
Translating into another language is
called localization
Font Editing and Design Tools
Allow you to create your own fonts
ResEdit for MAC
Fontographer (from Macromedia) caan be
used to create Postscript, TrueType and
bitmapped fonts for MAC, PB, SUN
includes a freehand drawing tool
3D programs, such as COOL 3D and
HotTEXT, create special effects
See text for descriptions
Font Editing and Design Tools
Fontographer (from Macromedia)
Editing and Design Tools
Hypermedia and Hypertext
Hyper media provides a structure of links
Hypertext words are linked to other
elements
Hypertext is usually searchable by
software robots
Hypermedia and Hypertext
Multimedia - combines text, graphics
and audio
Interactive multimedia - gives user
control over what and when content is
viewed (non-linear)
Hypermedia -provides a structure of
linked elements through which user
navigates and interacts
Hypermedia Structures
Hypermedia elements are called
nodes
Nodes are connected using links
A linked point is called an anchor
Hypermedia Structures
Link - connections between
conceptual elements (navigation
pathways and menus)
Node - contains text, graphics sounds
Anchor - the reference from one
document to another document,
image, sound or file on the web
Link anchor - where you came from
Hypermedia and Hypertext
Doug Englebart - inventor of mouse
1965 Ted Nelson coined the word
hypertext
Computer-based hypertext systems
will fundamentally alter the way
humans think, approach literature and
the expression of ideas
Hotlinks - lead user from one reference
to another
Using Hypertext
Searching for words
boolean search using AND, OR, NOT
truncation - using only part of word,
such as geo might yield result with
geology, geography, George, etc.
Search engines employ robots to
visit web pages and create indexes.
Hypertext Tools
Building or authoring
builder creates links, identifies nodes,
generates an index of words
Reading
both linear and increasingly non-linear
Becoming more comfortable with non-
linear hypertext systems will change
the way we think.

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