Recently I posted a question and answer that was marked as a duplicate by five users who clearly must not have read any answers to it. The question itself is unique. Nobody had previously asked how to use the SF font specifically. And it has a unique answer as well, if you actually read it.
In trying to make my case in the comments, my comments were deleted. What this appears to be is moderators just "backing up" the initial users' judgements without evaluating the question themselves.
If you only read the question, it appears to be a another "how do I use @font-face
" question, but in fact if you read the answer you can clearly see it's not; the answer involves something new called font-name abstraction (which in 10 years as a web developer I have never seen used before). Apple is proposing to add it to the W3C spec.
In the case of the SF font, it cannot be used (legally) with @font-face
. The answer provides info about this technique that hasn't been covered on SO before:
- You use it by referencing an abstracted generic system font name that can optionally describe various uses (headline, body, caption, etc).
- it's only supported by Safari in iOS9, at the time of this writing.
I want to point this out because more care should be taken before closing questions, especially ones that could be useful to a lot of people. If a user votes to close a question, it's important to also read the answer to determine whether a problem is a new one.
My whole point in adding the question the question to SO was to help other people. Obviously I already had the answer.