From the course: Creating Icon Fonts for the Web

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Exploring generated files

Exploring generated files

From the course: Creating Icon Fonts for the Web

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Exploring generated files

The font-face syntax generated by Font Squirrel is really solid. It's updated as best practices evolved so you can use it with a high degree of confidence. Now, it doesn't mean that you can just plug their syntax into your files and expect it to work properly. So what I want to do in this exercise is take a look at the generated files that Font Squirrel made for us and the @font-face syntax. And use that as a way to sort of explore where you might need to modify the code that you've downloaded for your own projects. So in my finder window here, I have the 05_02 folder opened up and then chunky_mobile. And this is really just all of the files that we've downloaded in the last exercise from Font Squirrel. So again we have an HTML demo file. We have four fonts that we asked for: the SVEG, the EOT, the TrueType and the WAFF. We have the configuration file. And then we have the style sheet. The only two that we're really concerned about right now are the style sheet and the demo file. And,…

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