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Top Forums Web Development Ideas for a New Mobile Design Post 303041530 by Neo on Wednesday 27th of November 2019 04:02:25 AM
Old 11-27-2019
I have not noticed, when viewing unix.com, any notable slowdown our our use of Font Awesome.

In fact, when I just checked, it shows the FA fonts cached in memory, with 0 additional delay.

Ideas for a New Mobile Design-screen-shot-2019-11-27-35828-pmpng

I am guessing that those guys in that report you cited Akskay had their browser caching disabled in dev tools.

We use both Google Fonts and FA and I have never noticed any delay greater or less, then either one (after caching), so far. Of course, the initial loading will be faster depending on the CDN used and how those fonts are loaded, initially. If the Google CDN is faster than the FA CDN, that might be a factor in in initial load; but on the other hand, my experience is that networks change all the time (speed, performance), so drawing conclusions about loading time, can be very deceptive.

More importantly, is the caching, and after initial load, FB and Google Fonts (we use both) are cached in browser memory, and so are both very fast.
 

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Font::TTF::GDEF(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				      Font::TTF::GDEF(3pm)

NAME
Font::TTF::GDEF - Opentype GDEF table support DESCRIPTION
The GDEF table contains various global lists of information which are apparantly used in other places in an OpenType renderer. But precisely where is open to speculation... INSTANCE VARIABLES
There are 4 tables in the GDEF table, each with their own structure: GLYPH This is an Font::TTF::Coverage Class Definition table containing information as to what type each glyph is. ATTACH The attach table consists of a coverage table and then attachment points for each glyph in the coverage table: COVERAGE This is a coverage table POINTS This is an array of point elements. Each element is an array of curve points corresponding to the attachment points on that glyph. The order of the curve points in the array corresponds to the attachment point number specified in the MARKS coverage table (see below). LIG This contains the ligature caret positioning information for ligature glyphs COVERAGE A coverage table to say which glyphs are ligatures LIGS An array of elements for each ligature. Each element is an array of information for each caret position in the ligature (there being number of components - 1 of these, generally) FMT This is the format of the information and is important to provide the semantics for the value. This value must be set correctly before output VAL The value which has meaning according to FMT DEVICE For FMT = 3, a device table is also referenced which is stored here MARKS Due to confusion in the GDEF specification, this field is currently withdrawn until the confusion is resolved. That way, perhaps this stuff will work! This class definition table stores the mark attachment point numbers for each attachment mark, to indicate which attachment point the mark attaches to on its base glyph. METHODS
$t->read Reads the table into the data structure $t->out($fh) Writes out this table. perl v5.10.1 2009-01-29 Font::TTF::GDEF(3pm)
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