Despite what you may read elsewhere, there is no direct relationship between em and px.
As one of the links states:
the "em" value is based
on the width of the uppercase M
So it's going to be different for every font. A narrow font might have the same height (in px) as an extended font, but the em size will be different.
EDIT three years later:
There are now lots of sources which say that 1em = font size (in px). That is, when you write font-size:16px
, then 1em = 16px. This still doesn't agree with the Adobe source (which says 1em = the font size in pt
), but in either case it seems bizarre; the em size would be far too large with condensed fonts and far too small with extended fonts.
I'm going to make some test pages and see for myself.
And also:
I see that nobody (including me) actually answered the question (which was kind of hidden):
I also read somewhere about some ie bug and to overcome that set body font-size to something
According to this page, you need to add this to your css: html{ font-size:100%; }
. That page is six years old, and I haven't read the (hundreds) of comments, so I don't know if it's still relevant.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…