How to efficiently convert pixels to viewport units? - html

I have been building a Progressive Web App. For designing its layout, I have (erroneously) been using a viewport meta width of 720px, as it looked good on my mobile phone.
To make it functional on any device, I changed the width to "device-width", and I am trying to migrate from using pixels for the elements height/width/margins/padding/border, ...etc, to using viewport units.
I am doing this manually, and not at all efficiently. Until now, I've tried converting the size values of the elements by calculating their % over the device's resolution, but this gets complicated with margins, padding, borders...
Is there a way of seeing the box model (see below) for an entire HTML page?
Or is there a cleaner, less manual way of converting from px to vw,vh?
PS. I have seen some similar questions, but all seem focused on particular elements, not on the whole page.

Related

Make a div element "think" that the screen with is a certain width?

Curious whether there is a way to make an element think that the viewport is a certain width?
This would be used to test responsive CSS utilities. For example this CSS component is responsive, but to see the behavior users have to make the browser window smaller.
If there was a way to "Trick" the markup test elements into thinking that the viewport was a certain width the manual dragging of the browser window would not be necessary.
One possibility, although I doubt it's implemented, is for the browser developer tooling to expose an API that allowed us to select and inform the browser that certain elements should consider the browser to be rendered at a certain viewport size ...
A Way
While fiddling around with this test I accidentally discovered that there is a way to trigger the media queries without developer tooling and that is to zoom the viewport with ctrl +. That will trigger the media queries, although not with declarative precision that I'm looking for obviously.
Put it in an <iframe>. This tag creates a new window context, the width of which media queries are compared against. The iframe width can be manipulated to emulate different device widths, per this example:
https://codepen.io/anon/pen/jJNyJd
An <iframe> is used by the Material Design resizer tester to emulate different screens sizes in-browser:
https://material.io/tools/resizer/
As far as I know this is the only way to accomplish this.

Should I use % or 'px' in HTML

Regardless of whether it is HTML, XHTML or HTML5 you find those annoying percentages littered throughout the place. Yet... I see an awful lot of websites dare not go near them. Yet I was always encouraged through uni to use them.
So which should I be using? Which would lead to better site design and why?
I'm aware to avoid the use of height although HTML5 really doesn't like me not specifying height if I want to use percentages.
Thanks for taking the time to read.
It really depends on what you do you want to build up.
Sometimes I need to build a website which could be read by people with certain disabilities. If for example also older people visit your site its good to use % so that they could zoom in your page and the layout still looks pretty.
Fixed Design Layouts Fixed design layouts have a specific width and do
not scale to fit the browser window. Websites that make use of it can
be aligned to the left, centre or even aligned to the right as and
when required.
Benefits of Fixed layouts: With fixed design layouts you have control
over the line length, flow and placement of the elements on the web
page. The designer has a fixed space to work with and the line lengths
of the text and the placement of images can be designated easily.
Drawbacks of Fixed layouts: Fixed design layouts tend to leave lots of
empty space on either side of the design when viewed on high screen
resolutions. This dwarfs the size of the web page and gives an
impression that it is floating on the screen.
Fluid Layout Fluid design layouts use percentages instead of pixels to
define their width and they fill the entire browser window. They are
also called fixed or dynamic designs.
Benefits of Fluid layouts: One of the major benefits of fluid design
layouts is their accessibility features. They cater to more number of
users. This is because, whatever may be the screen resolution or
device of the user, fixed design layouts adapt better. It makes use of
the entire browser window by spreading out. This maximizes the area
for the content to e displayed and more information can be seen at one
go. Therefore, there is no empty space on the window screen. This is a
better bet as compared to fixed layouts that leave a great deal of
empty space.
For fonts, you should use percentages (or em's, or rems) if you don't wish to fix the font size in Internet Explorer. If you use pixels, then users of Internet Explorer who change their default font size in their browser settings won't see the fonts increase/decrease. So this makes your text potentially less readable for users in that browser.
A great resource for this is the first chapter of Dan Cederholm's Bulletproof Web Design.
For layout, using percentages or em's will make your design more flexible to changing font sizes/localization etc. This is also covered in the book.

How to make a webpage that will fit to all screen resolution

I am attempting to create a webpage formatted to fit the width of all screen
sizes (or resolutions).
In other words, I want to format the width of my page in such a way that anyone who views it will not have to use a horizontal scroll bar at the bottom of the screen.
So far, I have found no help on this topic.
Well, there are several approaches. One would be to use ems/percentages for your widths thus achieving a fluid design that adopts to your users screen resolution. The other is to have several css sheets for different widths and call them based upon a screen resolution check from a simple js code.
The first one is a bit harder, but yields good stable results. On the other hand, (as a designer) it kinda restricts your creativity a bit.
It seems to me like the latter is more widely used. Nowadays, 3 different stylesheets will suffice for most devices around the world. One around 900px will cover somewhat older screens, one around 1160px will handle the larger and more modern screens, and one for mobile devices(sorry, no idea on approximate width) should do the trick.
The way you're asking this question, not only will the width of the body have to be 100%, but the width of its the child elements will also have to be in percentages.
The only way to achieve a scalable web page is by avoiding fixed sizes. Of course that presents problems with text since it will attempt to wrap it on the following lines, so you must either specify a minimum width or combine it with a pre tag with overflow: hidden so that it won't affect your page layout at the expense of simply not being able to read the text.
Fortunately, you can easily test your page by simply shrinking your web browser to smaller resolutions and seeing how it pans out.

Problems with CSS and Screen Resolutions

I am creating a website and would like to get the opinion of some of the more experienced web developers.
How does one create a website where the element style attributes (padding, margin, height, width, etc) are appropriate for the users screen resolution?
With CSS i get to choose one value and that is the final value which will be displayed for all users, regardless of their browsing resolution.
For example, say i would like an image to be displayed 10% to the left of its container i would do the following: padding-left: 15%; Now, that may work fine for some resolutions but for others i may need that value to be higher.
What do more experienced web developers do in regards to screen resolution differences?
It sounds like your goal is to have your layout look literally the same at any resolution, which isn't really practical. Remember that images scale poorly! What most designers do is use percentages where possible to allow the layout to "flow" to fit most resolutions while remaining attractive.
If you analyze (for example) Stack Overflow. you'll see that it is a fixed-width set that is itself centered in the browser. Apple does the same thing, with some art elements that are displayed gracefully at any window width. It's an artistic problem, and I'm not sure the answer can be given with any more clarity than that.
It depends entirely on your design goals.
Most designers use fixed-width areas and let it center on the screen.
In some cases you can use CSS media-queries to apply specific rules to different types and sizes of screens (browser support is limited).
You can use min/max-width to handle many cases of content growing too large or small - but there is no equivalent for margins.
SVG graphics can be used to provide scalable images that look good at any resolution.
Some companies provide an entirely separate site for mobile users.
There are other tips and tricks but in general most designers avoid these issues by using fixed-width layouts - even though that's not always ideal.
I usually define those styles in em units, which are relative to the font size. So, increasing the text size increases padding & margins proportionately.

Should websites expand on window resize?

I'm asking this question purely from a usability standpoint!
Should a website expand/stretch to fill the viewing area when you resize a browser window?
I know for sure there are the obvious cons:
Wide columns of text are hard to read.
Writing html/css using percents can be a pain.
It makes you vulnerable to having your design stretched past it's limits if an image is too wide, or a block of text is added that is too long. (see it's a pain to code the html/css).
The only Pro I can think of is that users who use the font-resizing that is built into their browser won't have to deal with columns that are only a few words long, with a body of white-space on either side.
However, I think that may be a browser problem more than anything else (Firefox 3 allows you to zoom everything instead of just the text, which comes in handy all the time)
edit: I noticed stack overflow is fixed width, but coding horror resizes. It seems Jeff doesn't have a strong preference either way.
Raw HTML does just that. Are you changing your data so that it doesn't render so good in random sized windows?
In the olden days, everyone had VGA screens. Now, that resolution is most uncommon. Who knows what resolutions are going to be common in the future? And why expect a certain minimum width or height?
From a usability viewpoint, demanding a certain resolution from your users is just going to create a degraded experience for anyone not using that resolution. Another thing that comes from this is what is fixed width? I've seen plenty of fixed size windows (popups) that just don't render right because my fonts are different from the designer's.
In terms of web site scaling I like fixed sized web sites that scales nicely using the browsers "zoom" function. I don't want a really wide page with tiny fonts on my 1920 res monitor. I don't know if the web designer has to do anything to make it scale nicely when zoomed, but the zoom in FF3 is awesome, the one in IE7 is useless...
The design should be fluid within sensible bounds.
Use CSS has min-width and max-width properties (which work in every browser, including IE7+) to prevent design from stretching too much.
The important thing is never to have a block of text stretch too wide. If a window is expanded, no block of text should indefinitely stretch to match because reading becomes a difficulty.
Like people have said, it really depends on what information the site is displaying. Two good examples are StackOverflow, and Google Images..
If stackoverflow stretched to fit the screen, longer answers would be annoying to read, because the eye finds it difficult to scan over long lines - this is exactly why newspapers use columns for everything, and why books are the all the same sort of width.
With Google Images, where the content is basically a bunch of 200px wide images, it stretches to fit the browser width and is still perfectly readable.
Basically, bear in mind the eye hates reading long lines of text, and base your design on that. You can design your site so when you increase the font size, all the layout scales nicely with it (The only site I can think of that does this is www.geektechnique.org - press Ctrl+-/= or Ctrl+scrollwheel, and the layout changes width with the font size)
I guess like a lot of things: it depends. I usually do both. Some content stays fixed width to look good or if it can't benefit form more space. other stuff is set to 100% if it seems like it'd be usefull.
This should be decided on how complicated the design of your website is. The more complicated, graphically or component wise (amount of content divs), will determine how well your website will scale. Generally you will find most graphic designers website will not scale because they are graphically intensive. However informational website will scale to make the best use of readable space on the screen and are not complicated for ease of use. Its a matter of preference really.
I think it depends on the content of the site. Sites like SOFlow, Forums, and other sites have an emphasis on reading lots of details, so having more real estate to do so is a big benefit in my mind. The less vertical scroll, the better.
However, for sites a little less demanding on the reading level, even blogs or retail sites where you're simply displaying an individual product, having a fixed width allows you to keep things more concise.
I'm a big fan of fully-fluid designs. As to the usability complaints about lines of text that are too long... if they're too long because of the size of my browser window, then I can just as easily make the window narrower as I can make it wider.
This is a matter of styling preference. Both can be equally usable depending on implementation. Columns can also be used, if the screen gets wide enough. Personally, I find it annoying when there is a single, narrow column of text going down the screen.
Edit for 2012: Yes, your website should respond to the size of the window it is being displayed in.
There are many places to read more about this, including:
http://johnpolacek.github.com/scrolldeck.js/decks/responsive/
http://www.abookapart.com/products/responsive-web-design
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Responsive_Web_Design
Note: if you use the zoom functionality in your browser, a fixed layout squashes the text, whereas a fluid layout allows it to take up the whole screen.
Maybe this is just a browser problem, but it's definately an argument in favor of fluid
Paragraph widths larger than your display make a web site completely unusable. You have to jiggle the horizontal scrollbar back and forth for every single line you read. I'm doing a web design subject at university and the textbook calls the designs which adapt to your screen width fluid layout.
I'm designing my big class project using fluid layout, it's a bit more trouble than fixed width. I suspect none of the other students will use it, the markers won't notice and none of the professional sites we're imitating are fluid either.
I'd say fluid all the way. The user can always go back to a smaller size window if he doesn't like the result of enlarging it, but he can't do anything about a fixed layout.
If you really, really hate the idea of your site looking ugly because of something a user with a large screen does, then for the sake of all that is true and beautiful, at least never use pixel-based fixed layouts! CSS has these neat text-relative size units like "em" that allow parts of your page to scale with the font size while others (like images) stay in their "natural" size.
Why not use them and make your page scale well without relying on the less flexible "scale everything" of FF3 that's really just a workaround for sites that use a dumb pixel-based fixed layout?
A lot of people are saying things like "this is a matter of taste" or "I don't like big fonts on my high-pixel display." Number of pixels has nothing to do with it, and it's not a matter of taste. It's a matter of DPI, which is directly related to display resolution and font size. If your layout scales along with the DPI of the fonts (by being specified in ems for instance, and using SVG), then you end up with very beautiful, very crisp websites that work optimally with any display.
http://www.boutell.com/newfaq/creating/anyresolution.html
There's probably a compromise design between fixed and fluid designs. You can design a site fluid-like but set the css property max-width to 1024 (or whatever). This means you get a fluid layout when the window width is less then 1024 and fixed width when it is greater.
Then narrow screen users (like my 800 pixel eee 701) don't have to twiddle the horizontal scrollbar to read every single line and wide screen users (who don't know how to resize their browser window) don't get 500 character wide, 1 character high paragraphs.