Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

prepend website url to the font name #22

Open
wants to merge 3 commits into
base: master
Choose a base branch
from

Conversation

jpfluger
Copy link

Hello. Very convenient bash script that you wrote here. Thank you.

My project required self-hosting of fonts for multiple subdomains. I added the website parameter to prepend the url to the font name so it gets saved to font.css as url('https://example.com/fonts/FONT-NAME.woff2').

Just a simple convenience parameter. If you don't want to include it, that's okay and I'll delete the pull request. But if you do, great.

@neverpanic
Copy link
Owner

Interesting idea, but I'm wondering why you're not just putting the CSS on example.com as well, which would make this unnecessary?

@jpfluger
Copy link
Author

Good point. Could be done that way. It's a larger federated project, so we used a subdomain to host common resources.

I thought of different use case that might have more value.... I concatenate all core .css files into a single file which is stored in a different folder than the fonts. Since the default is relative-pathing, the fonts would not be found. This is fixed by using an absolute url. In this case I would use website="/fonts/ to create /fonts/FONT-NAME.woff2. For reference, see W3, Section 6.4, which says: "Partial URLs are interpreted relative to the source of the style sheet, not relative to the document."

@neverpanic
Copy link
Owner

OK, I see that use case and am willing to accept this patch, but I'm not convinced --website is a good parameter name for this. Let's maybe use --base-path instead?

However, I don't like that the generated output CSS file would then not work in-place, i.e. if you were to generate a CSS file with this parameter and attempted to use it without modifications in a web page, it would not work. So I'm thinking maybe the better approach would be to support putting the fonts into a subfolder, i.e. making this parameter also affect the path where the fonts would be stored and call it --font-subdir? What do you think?

@jpfluger
Copy link
Author

I like your idea of --base-path - it is a better and more correct name than --website.

The --font-subdir parameter is a good idea and I understand what you say about modifications to the CSS. For many simple websites, this is a good thing. I think you should include it.

I actually already mimic --font-subdir in my setup script. This script creates a directory per font and then calls google-font-download to download that font to that folder and create the css inside of it.

And this is perfect I think for simple websites. But once concatenation of css files occurs, then --base-path might need to still be used. Maybe my use case is more complex than other developers? Or maybe my /css folder hierarchy needs to be tweaked? I am not certain. What I know is that --font-subdir would be useful but I would still need to use --base-path with it.

I will try to explain by using one of my websites as an example. For tigsus.com, there are font dependencies on...

  • google
  • font-awesome

And then for site-layout, third party assets are isolated from local assets or sub-sections.

  • Third party fonts: _fonts
  • Third party libraries: _third
  • css, including concatenated css from third-party libs and _fonts: /css
  • css that's in a sub-section: /users/css

For example, during development, I may use combined-font-local.css but then in production I use a concatenated/combined file in combined-local.css.

Then in my setup scripts for fonts, I declare various types of css types.

URL_FONTS_LOCAL="/public/_fonts"
URL_FONTS_DEV="//dev.public-url.com:8401/public/_fonts"
URL_FONTS_PROTO="//proto.public-url.com/public/_fonts"
URL_FONTS_PROD="//public-url.com/public/_fonts"
URL_FONTS_AWS="//cdn-public/_fonts"

The script automatically creates font/css directories and google-font-download greatly assists in this process. Then css is combined for all third party libraries and internal resources into a single file for publishing. I could use @import but I don't see an advantage to it right now.

So.... if --font-subdir would get me a better development paradigm, then great! Do you see it? Right now I don't see it. I would still need --base-path as well. I wish there was a simpler paradigm because it would also simplify my setup script. Maybe I'm missing something but I don't think so.

But also my example is most likely in the minority. Adding --base-path is sufficient for my needs and I wouldn't need to keep a fork open.

@jpfluger
Copy link
Author

With some retooling for my complex example, what might work is using a combination of --base-path and --font-subdir and --output. The assumption is that font.css is not automatically created inside the font directory inside --font-subdir.

For example, run google-font-download with the following inputs:

This is created:

  • _fonts/Roboto
  • _fonts/Kaushan-Script
  • _fonts/Montserrat
  • css/_fonts.css ( --base-path for each font would be ../_fonts/ and the --font-subdir would have been _fonts)
  • css/combined-css-all.css (concats _fonts.css or uses @import plus all other referenced css)

Then the font urls inside the generated output CSS file should work in place without resorting to multiple specialized url prefixes (eg URL_FONTS_LOCAL or URL_FONTS_DEV). But like I said, my use case is most likely in the minority. I'm perfectly happy getting --base-path included.

@sjpbeale
Copy link

@neverpanic Will this be merged? We also have the case of locally hosting but on an independent subdomain. Another case is if we want to combine / minify the font css, relative paths will lose the font file location.

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Labels
None yet
Projects
None yet
Development

Successfully merging this pull request may close these issues.

None yet

3 participants