"Mengu" <[email protected]> wrote: > On Sunday, 18 January 2015 at 17:05:28 UTC, Andrei Alexandrescu wrote: >> On 1/18/15 9:02 AM, aldanor wrote: >>> This is usually solved by media queries / responsive design / >> grid >>> frameworks, sorry if I'm stating the obvious :) Try resizing >> the >>> commonly used websites and see what happens, e.g. for >> ruby-lang you have >>> at least 3 "versions" which are selected automatically based >> on the >>> current viewport's settings which the browser provides: >>> http://imgur.com/a/gE38d >>> >>> E.g. the menus on the left getting folded into one mobile >> "button" which >>> expands them on demand and leaves more space for the actual >> content, or >>> some elements disappearing in smaller viewports altogether >> (like the >>> twitter feed div). This is quite a pain to manage manually >> without >>> having an underlying grid framework. >> >> My understanding is there are various simpler way to do this, > e.g. >> separate styles for small screen devices, redirection to a > different >> URL, setting "hidden" to certain DIVs dynamically > etc. etc. As you >> saying there's no way to do this unless we use > some grid framework I >> know nothing about and probably need to > learn? -- Andrei > > when not using a css framework like this, then the app for the mobile > will consist of css and javascript hacks. and mostly one would lack the > designers' and frontend developers' experience :) > > if i may, i'll go and straightly ask a very great designer friend of mine > to help us out. he'll either design a new interface for us or help us > make this one better. let me know your call.
Give it a couple more weeks until I migrate more stuff to CSS, then ask what it would take to improve the css. Thanks!
