Miika Mäkinen wrote:
I remember seeing one test on the @media handheld support and found it:
http://htmldog.com/ptg/archives/55.php
and a conclusion at http://www.htmldog.com/ptg/archives/56.php
I guess the main issue still is that sizable chunk of mobile browser
share (Pocket
On Jan 24, 2006, at 5:53 PM, Miika Mäkinen wrote:
By wireless do you mean mobile and pdas?
Problem is that most of the PDAs will include stylesheets they
shouldn't (@media screen). I've found that the only way to do good
contents for mobile is to server different pages.
Hi,
This was
On Jan 24, 2006, at 5:50 PM, Nic wrote:
Any suggestions on creating stylesheets specific to wireless?
Well, obviously, declare your css with media=handheld, then style
your
page accordingly :)
Always a good place to start, smarty pants :)
So it seems advantageous serving the same
So it seems advantageous serving the same style for print and handheld?
Ahhh, no. I wouldn't go that far. Print styles often drop menus entirely,
which you need to keep for your handheld. I also tend to drop background
images and other superfluous images in print, whereas you may want to
Hi,
Any suggestions on creating stylesheets specific to wireless? The
object is one site served to (3) UAs.
Return True,
Christopher Kennon
Principal/Designer/Programmer -Bushidodeep
http://bushidodeep.com/
__
Knowing is not enough, you must apply;
Any suggestions on creating stylesheets specific to wireless?
Well, obviously, declare your css with media=handheld, then style your
page accordingly :)
Remember that screen sizes are *small*, so fixed widths are a no-go. Use %
instead of px.
Same for fixed font sizes. Use em rather than
By wireless do you mean mobile and pdas?Problem is that most of the PDAs will include stylesheets they shouldn't (@media screen). I've found that the only way to do good contents for mobile is to server different pages.
MiikaOn 1/25/06, Chris Kennon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,Any suggestions on