Responsive Web Design - The Viewport

CSS is the language we use to style an HTML document.
CSS describes how HTML elements should be displayed.
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Responsive Web Design - The Viewport

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Responsive Web Design - The Viewport


What is The Viewport?
The viewport is the user's visible area of a web page.
The viewport varies with the device, and will be smaller on a mobile phone than on a computer screen.
Before tablets and mobile phones, web pages were designed only for computer screens, and it was common for
web pages to have a static design and a fixed size.
Then, when we started surfing the internet using tablets and mobile phones, fixed
size web pages were too large to fit the viewport.
To fix this, browsers on those devices scaled down the entire web page to fit the screen.
This was not perfect!! But a quick fix.

Setting The Viewport
HTML5 introduced a method to let web designers take control over the viewport, through the
<meta> tag.
You should include the following <meta> viewport element in all your web pages:


<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">


This gives the browser instructions on how
to control the page's dimensions and scaling.
The width=device-width part sets the width of the page to follow the screen-width of the device (which will vary depending on the device).
The initial-scale=1.0 part sets the initial zoom level when the page is first loaded by the browser.
Here is an example of a web page without the viewport meta tag, and the same web page with the viewport meta tag:



Without the
viewport meta tag




With the
viewport meta tag





Tip: If you are browsing this page with a phone or a tablet, you can click on the two links above to see the difference.


Size Content to The Viewport
Users are used to scroll websites vertically on both desktop and mobile
devices - but not horizontally!
So, if the user is forced to scroll horizontally, or zoom out, to see the
whole web page it results in a poor user experience.
Some additional rules to follow:
1. Do NOT use large fixed width elements - For example, if
an image is displayed at a width wider than the viewport it can cause the
viewport to scroll horizontally. Remember to adjust this content to fit within
the width of the viewport.
2. Do NOT let the content rely on a particular viewport width to
render well - Since screen dimensions and width in CSS pixels vary
widely between devices, content should not rely on a particular viewport width
to render well.
3. Use CSS media queries to apply different styling for small and
large screens - Setting large absolute CSS widths for page elements
will cause the element to be too wide for the viewport on a smaller device.
Instead, consider using relative width values, such as width: 100%. Also, be
careful of using large absolute positioning values. It may cause the element to
fall outside the viewport on small devices.













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Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/css/css_rwd_viewport.asp
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