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An Issue of Width: the Resolution Problem
by Anthony Stai
There is a problem that has plagued the web ever since graphical
designs for web pages started to become common – and yet it's a
problem that's never been solved. You see, different sized monitors can
handle different widths of page, and yet HTML doesn't really let you
take width into consideration when you're designing. Why is this such a
problem? Well, let me explain.
What is Resolution?
Before we can get to the problem, you need to know what a screen
resolution is. To put it simply, your resolution is the number of
pixels that can be displayed across your monitor, horizontally and
vertically. For example, at 640x480 resolution (the lowest anyone still
uses), your screen is 640 pixels wide by 480 pixels high.
Most monitors can handle more than one resolution, and will give you a
choice between them. Typically, there will be a lower resolution that
fits less pixels on the screen but makes them look bigger, and a higher
one that fits more but makes everything look small. The default is
usually somewhere in the middle.
To check the resolution you're using now, right click on your desktop
and choose Properties. Now go to the Settings tab and look at the
screen resolution section. On most computers, there will be up to four
settings to choose from: 640x480, 800x600, 1024x768 and 1280x1024. It's
worth changing your resolution a few times and going to some web pages,
to get an idea of how much width each setting gives you.
Now, you have to realise that the maximum width of your website, in
pixels, will be the lowest width you expect your site's visitors to be
using. In almost all cases, this is 800x600: the 640x480 users are now
a small enough minority to mostly ignore, as they'll be used to sites
displaying incorrectly. At 800x600 and up, though, you should test your
site to make sure it looks good.
The Price of Failure.
If you don't test your site correctly, then various things will go
wrong. At resolutions lower than the one you designed the site for,
visitors may see horizontal scrollbars. If you fix the site's width too
low, though, visitors using higher resolutions may just see a thin
strip of your website in the middle of their screen.
Possible Solutions.
The most popular solution to the resolution problem is to just design
as if everyone was using 800x600 – after all, people with big
monitors can just make their browser windows smaller. To make a fixed
width design, simply set the CSS width of your body tag to the width
you want in pixels (so for 800x600, width: 800px). If you take this
approach, you will probably want to set the CSS margins to auto, as
this will put your fixed-width page in the centre of larger screens
– if you leave the margins alone, then your page will appear on
the far left of the web browser at high resolutions, which is common to
see but still looks bad.
Of course, the more complicated but better way of doing things is to
make sure that your design will work just as well no matter how wide
the browser is, because it stretches to fit. These kinds of designs are
known as 'elastic'. This can be difficult, but it's doable, especially
for relatively simple designs. If your design has three columns, for
example, you can make the left and right columns fixed-width but leave
the middle column to take up all the remaining width.
The biggest concern with elastic designs tends to be the graphics: if
you have a fixed-width header, how can you adjust your site for any
possible width? In most cases, the solution is to make your header an
image that floats over a background continuing it. For example, you
might use an image of navigation text floating over a line – you
can then continue that line as the background image, to avoid it
suddenly appearing to stop if the viewer's resolution is wider than
your navigation images. CSS gives you a lot of power to create
illusions like this: make good use of it.
About
The Author:
Anthony Stai invites you to
take your
website to the next level. Get one of the best Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) books on the market for Free! Learn the techniques
that differentiate the amateurs from the pros. Get your book at http://www.makemoneyonline4you.com/seo.html
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