Google has officially recommended Responsive Web Design as
their preferred method for building mobile websites. If you have a website or a
blog, it is time to consider switching to responsive design instead of maintaining
separate mobile- and tablet-friendly websites.
If you are new to the concept of Responsive Web Design
(RWD), here are the common questions that you may have around this technique.
Why should I switch
my website to RWD?
Your website looks great of the desktop screen but it may
not be true when your site is viewed on a smartphone or a tablet. Once you make
the design responsive, the website will look good (and readable) on all
screens.
With Responsive Design you can create one design and it will
automatically adapt itself based on the screen size of the mobile device. This
approach offers plenty of advantages:
• It
saves time and money as you don’t have to maintain separate websites for
desktops and mobile phones.
• Responsive
Design is good for your website’s SEO (search rankings) as every page on your
site will have a single URL and thus Google juice is preserved. You don’t have
to worry about situations where some sites link to your mobile site while
others link to your desktop site.
• Your
Google Analytics reports will paint a better picture of your site’s usage since
the data from mobile and desktop users will be consolidated.
• The
same will be true for the social sharing stats (Facebook Likes, Tweets, +1’s)
since the mobile and desktop versions of your web pages will have the same URL.
• Responsive
Designs are easier to maintain as they do not involve any server-side
components. You just have to modify the underlying CSS of a page to change its
appearance (or layout) on a particular device.
What should I know to
get started with Responsive Design?
Responsive Design is pure HTML and CSS. You create rules in
CSS that change style based on the screen size of the user’s device.
For example, you can write a rule that says if a user’s
screen-size is less than 320 pixels, don’t show the sidebar or if the screen
size is greater than 1920 pixels (widescreen desktop), increase the font size
of the body text to 15px.
How do I check if
particular website is using Responsive Design?
That’s easy. Open that website in any desktop browser and
resize the browser. If the site’s layout changes as you resize, the design is
responsive.
If I go with the Responsive Design approach, will my website
work with older browsers?
Mostly yes. RWD uses CSS3 media-queries and HTML5 (for
better semantics) that are not supported in older versions of IE. However,
there are JavaScript based solutions — respond.js and modernize for
example — that bring the power of CSS3 and HTML5 to older browsers including
IE6.
Does Responsive Design play nicely with advertising networks
like Google AdSense?
If you using ads on your website, you should carefully
choose the formats because wide units (like the 728×60 pixel leaderboard) may
not fit on a 320px mobile screen. I prefer using standard rectangular units
(like 300×250) since they easily fit on smartphone screens and widescreen
desktops.
There are thousands of mobile devices. What screen
resolutions should my responsive website support?
I would recommend setting break points for at least the following
viewports in your CSS3 Mediaqueries — 320px (iPhone landscape), 480 px (iPhone
portrait), 600px (Android Tablets), 768px (iPad + ~Galaxy Tabs) and 1024px
(iPad landscape and desktops).
For more details on our products and services,
please feel free to visit us at Online Marketing
Company New Delhi, Online Marketing
Companies New Delhi & Best Online
Marketing Company New Delhi
No comments:
Post a Comment