(This is about as mundane and pointless as it can get, but it is a poll, so…)
What do you guys think of the way that Chrome 64 handles underlines? It skips a bit for descenders. (For those who don’t have Chrome, enjoin and enjoin now look nearly the same to us.)
I’m on the fence. I wrote a small script/stylesheet that turned it off, but turned it back on to see if I could get used to it.
I’d much rather Chrome not gobble up so much memory and let websites break it in various ways. the way it displays underlined text isn’t even on the radar.
Huh. Should be a part of Chrome 64. Are you sure you have the most current version?
Are you maybe on a Mac or Linux? Maybe it’s not been rolled out to them yet.
I am surprised, as I would have thought that this would be the one place where people would have noticed, both the people and the site, since there’s so much underlining.
Also, weird that I made a poll but left out the very option I stated: “Not sure.” For reference, use the last option for that.
Is that what it is? It’s fine for the most part but it looks terrible when people hyperlink stuff and their text has lots of descenders or commas.
Even www.google.com looks kinda ugly.
That’s actually an example that I think looks okay. The g’s have big extenders, and there’s enough space between them to reestablish the line. It’s when there’s a bunch of symbols and commas splitting it up where I think it looks bad.
To get the effect they want and have it look good, I think it requires altering placement as well. Personally, I would just leave it off by default and allow sites to opt in.
Anyways, if anyone’s interested, I can make a very quick script to remove it. Or just put it up on Stylish.
Indeed. And I could see another solution there, too. Rather than completely remove the line, have it fade out. Though, personally, I think raising the comma up a little bit would be better.
My Safari browser on the iPad has the broken style underline. Has it always been this way? If so, that’s probably why I never noticed it when using Chrome on the desktop.