If you are reading this on a desktop computer, the screen shots are for you. If you have a smartphone or other smaller screened device let me know in the comments how it looks and what does/doesn't work.
I was feeling under the weather recently, and as a result I stayed home from work to sleep longer, take some medicine and get better. After waking up around 10am I realized that there were a few things I was putting off because I didn't have time during the day at work, and most of my free night-time is taken up by a side-project that I've been working on for the last few months (http://studybuddycampus.com) and normal life things.
I took the opportunity to make some changes to my wife's blog about our family. It now has 3 columns and she loves it! Go take a look: http://tommyandalisha.blogspot.com
I finally got around to fixing the obnoxious problem I have when I visit this very site on my phone, the fixed-width sidebar. I know that I haven't been the best at updating and that is partly due to me wanting to play Halo/Call of Duty/etc or just not feeling like I have anything interesting to say. I feel that, as a heavy mobile internet user, I should have a site that looks good on a phone.
My site was slapped together a few years ago using asp.net/c# with master pages. Their was no concern in my mind for a mobile site, luckily master pages are wonderful and all I needed to do was create a duplicate of my existing template and start chopping. First thing I did was move the sidebar on top so that it sits on top of the content it normally flanks. Then I gave each main wrapper a width of 100% so that it would stretch to whatever screen size it was given. I checked it out on my phone and realized that the phone thought the web page was much wider than the phone's screen. I added the following meta tag to prevent this and tell the page to fit the width of the device and not assume a desktop size.
After a few more tweaks to the general layout and adjusting the padding/margins I got the site to look somewhat presentable. I used some fancy jQuery magic to get the sidebar er...menu to show/hide when the arrow in the upper right-hand is touched.
Now all I needed to do was redirect users to the correct master page when visiting my site on a mobile phone. I found the following code online and added it to all pages in need of the mobile layout.
After that was in place I realized that images from my posts were a little bit too wide for the average phone screen. Instead of manually resizing all of my images, I once again turned to jQuery for some help. Using an example I found, I check each image's width, if it is wider than the current width of the body tag, it reduces its size to fit nicely within the confines of the given screen.
All in all the process was fairly painless to convert an existing site, most of the work was getting the formatting correct. In the future I'd like to build a site from the ground up with current mobile browsers in mind, but that's for another sick day...
I took the opportunity to make some changes to my wife's blog about our family. It now has 3 columns and she loves it! Go take a look: http://tommyandalisha.blogspot.com
I finally got around to fixing the obnoxious problem I have when I visit this very site on my phone, the fixed-width sidebar. I know that I haven't been the best at updating and that is partly due to me wanting to play Halo/Call of Duty/etc or just not feeling like I have anything interesting to say. I feel that, as a heavy mobile internet user, I should have a site that looks good on a phone.
My site was slapped together a few years ago using asp.net/c# with master pages. Their was no concern in my mind for a mobile site, luckily master pages are wonderful and all I needed to do was create a duplicate of my existing template and start chopping. First thing I did was move the sidebar on top so that it sits on top of the content it normally flanks. Then I gave each main wrapper a width of 100% so that it would stretch to whatever screen size it was given. I checked it out on my phone and realized that the phone thought the web page was much wider than the phone's screen. I added the following meta tag to prevent this and tell the page to fit the width of the device and not assume a desktop size.
After a few more tweaks to the general layout and adjusting the padding/margins I got the site to look somewhat presentable. I used some fancy jQuery magic to get the sidebar er...menu to show/hide when the arrow in the upper right-hand is touched.
Now all I needed to do was redirect users to the correct master page when visiting my site on a mobile phone. I found the following code online and added it to all pages in need of the mobile layout.
After that was in place I realized that images from my posts were a little bit too wide for the average phone screen. Instead of manually resizing all of my images, I once again turned to jQuery for some help. Using an example I found, I check each image's width, if it is wider than the current width of the body tag, it reduces its size to fit nicely within the confines of the given screen.
All in all the process was fairly painless to convert an existing site, most of the work was getting the formatting correct. In the future I'd like to build a site from the ground up with current mobile browsers in mind, but that's for another sick day...
No comments:
Post a Comment