I am trying to find what the value set in the font-size CSS property is corresponding to.
To give the context, I want to get in CSS the size in em of parts of the font (above the capital height and under the baseline) that I know from its OS/2 metrics. The em unit is relative to the given font-size and the OS/2 metrics are relative to the em-square.
My expectations are based on the following references. I did not found anything more clear or precise.
According to the W3C reference for font-size in CSS2.1, and as quoted in all the Stack Overflow questions I found on the topic (here, here and here):
The font size corresponds to the em square, a concept used in typography. Note that certain glyphs may bleed outside their em squares.
Following the few knowledges I have in typography, the em square is the entire square of font metrics in which ascending, descending, gaps, (etc...) lines are defined. In OS/2 metrics, the em square is the size of the font itself (often 1000 or 2048 UPM).

(source: microsoft.com)
The only explanation I found from W3C is in an old reference from 1997 for CSS1, and it is coherent with the modern digital definition of em square I use:
Certain values, such as width metrics, are expressed in units that are relative to an abstract square whose height is the intended distance between lines of type in the same type size. This square is called the EM square. (...) Common values are 250 (Intellifont), 1000 (Type 1) and 2048 (TrueType).
So if I understand these references correctly, the value specified in font-size should be used to generate the entire em square of the font, and we should be able to calculate the size of a part of the font from the font's size and metrics.
For example, with...
.my-letter {
font-family: 'Helvetica Neue';
font-size: 100px;
text-transform: uppercase;
}
... we should have an em square of 100px, and because Helvetica Neue has a Capital Height of 714 / 1000 (sCapHeight in the OS/2 table), a capital height of 71.4px.

The generated em square is bigger than font-size (tested on the latest versions of Chrome, Firefox and Safari for Mac). At first, I thought that the browser had an other definition of em square and was making a part of the letter equal to font-size, but I did not found any OS/2 metrics (with or without ascender, descender, gaps...) that matches with it.

You can also see this CodePen. Please note that I use line-height: 1; to highlight the expected size, but my problem is with font-size (the "rendered ink") and not line-height (the "collision box"). This is something I have to precise because I have already been misunderstood several times. line-height is not the problem.
So I have three questions:
font-size?font-size) ?Thank you for your help.
A font is often measured in pt (points). Points dictate the height of the lettering. There are approximately 72 (72.272) points in one inch or 2.54 cm. For example, the font size 72 would be about one inch tall, and 36 would be about a half of an inch.
The CSS font-size property denotes that a font is allocated the amount of space specified; it does not have to make use of all of this allocated space.
To understand what font size to use you need to understand your target audience, the message you are trying to communicate, and what you want them to do (amongst other things). Note: Font size impacts page experience metrics, page speed, accessibility and usability.
The 12px is the height of the font in pixels. The 13px is the height of the line in pixels.
Your understanding of the W3C references is correct, but your understanding of the red box is not.
The red box does not depict the em-square. Its height is the sum of the ascent and descent from the metrics.
The article (that had been shared in a now deleted answer) explains it very well. This is my attempt to turn it into a stand-alone answer.
Let's assume we have a <span> styled with the font-family: Roboto and font-size: 48px and we want to answer the seemingly simple question: What is the effective height of the span? Spoiler: It is 65px. This is how you could derive it:
First you need to know some metrics about the font. If you are on Linux you could inspect the font with FontForge like so:
$ fc-list | grep Roboto $ fontforge /usr/share/fonts/truetype/roboto/hinted/Roboto-Regular.ttf Under Element => Font Info... => General you can get the Em Size which is kind of like a unitless base unit of the font:

Under Element => Font Info... => OS/2 => Metrics you can find the ascent/descent, which are the largest extensions of the font:

What the browser does is to match the em size (2048) with the specified font size (48px). Based on that, it computes how big the area covered by the ascent/descent (2146, -555) is in relation to the em size. So the formula is roughly:
result_size = (ascent + |descent|) / em_size * font_size In this example:
(2146 + 555) / 2048 * 48px = 63.375px The remaining question is why the browser actually arrives at 65px instead. My assumption is that the ascent and descent get rounded up individually. Applying the formula individually gives 50.30px => 51px for the ascent and 13.01px => 14px for the descent, resulting in exactly 65px.
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