Advanced typography & layout options
Special style for intro paragraph. Typography is the art and technique of arranging type, type design, and modifying type glyphs. Type glyphs are created and modified using a variety of illustration techniques. The arrangement of type involves the selection of typefaces, point size, line length, leading.
Drop cap styles & two columns layout
Drop cap or initial is a letter at the beginning of a work, a chapter or a paragraph that is larger than the rest of the text. The word comes from the Latin initialis, which means standing at the beginning. It is often several lines in height and in older books or manuscripts ornately decorated.
Manuscripts had initials with images inside them, like those illustrated here, are known as historiated initials; they were an invention of the Insular art of the British Isles in the 8th century. Initials containing, typically, plant-form spirals with small figures of animals or men.
With a drop cap, the initial sits within the margins and runs several lines deep into the paragraph, pushing some normal-sized text off these lines. This keeps the left and top margins of the paragraph flush. In modern browsers, this can be done with a combination of HTML & CSS.
The classical tradition was late to use capital letters for initials at all; in surviving Roman texts it is often very hard to even separate the words as spacing was not used either. In the Late Antique period both came into in common use in Italy, the initials usually set in the left margin (as in the second example below).
Below is a sample of <pre> tag or code class:
<table border="1"> <span class="code-comment"><!-- color code with spans --> <tr> <th>Month</th> <th>Savings</th> </tr> </table>
Columns possible layout variations
In traditional typography, text is composed to create a readable, coherent, and visually satisfying whole that works invisibly, without the awareness of the reader. Even distribution of typeset material, with a minimum of distractions and anomalies, is aimed at producing clarity and transparency.
First of three columns
A column in structural engineering is a vertical structural element that transmits, through compression, the weight of the structure above to other structural elements below.
Second column
Other compression members are often termed "columns" because of the similar stress conditions. Columns are frequently used to support beams or arches on which the upper parts of walls.
Third column
In architecture "column" refers to such a structural element that also has certain proportional and decorative features.
The first text block is wide
A column in structural engineering is a vertical structural element that transmits, through compression, the weight of the structure above to other structural elements below. For the purpose of wind or earthquake engineering, columns may be designed to resist lateral forces.
The second one is thin
In architecture "column" refers to such a structural element that also has certain proportional and decorative features.