Making the design to be responsive is very easy as shown in my Responsive Design in 3 Steps tutorial, but maintaining the elements to look aesthetically balanced on all breakpoint layouts is an art. Today I'm going to share 5 of my commonly used CSS tricks along with sample cases for coding responsive designs. They are simple CSS properties such as min-width, max-width, overflow, and relative value — but these properties play an important part in responsive design.
1. Responsive Video (demo)
This responsive video CSS trick was discovered by tjkdesign.com. I've blogged about it before, you may read the details here. It makes the video embed to expand fullwidth to the boundary.
.video {
position: relative;
padding-bottom: 56.25%;
height: 0;
overflow: hidden;
}
.video iframe,
.video object,
.video embed {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
2. Min & Max Width (demo)
Max-width property allows you to set the max width of the element. The purpose of max-width is to prevent the element from extending the boundary.
Max-Width Container
In the example below, I specify the container to display at 800px if possible, but it should not exceed 90% of the boundary width.
.container {
width: 800px;
max-width: 90%;
}
Responsive Image
You can make the image auto resize to the max width of the boundary by using max-width:100% and height:auto.
img {
max-width: 100%;
height: auto;
}
The above responsive image CSS works on IE7 and IE9, but doesn't work on IE8. To fix it, add width:auto. You may apply a conditional CSS specifically for IE8 or use the IE hack below:
@media \0screen {
img {
width: auto; /* for ie 8 */
}
}
Min-Width
Min-width is opposit to max-width. It sets the minimum width of an element. In the example form below, min-width is used on the input text field to prevent the input from getting very small when scaling down.
3. Relative Values (demo)
In responsive design, knowing when to use relative value can simplify the CSS and maximize the best layout result. Below are some examples.
Relative Margin
Below is an example of a commentlist where relative left margin is used to space out the threaded comments. Instead of using fixed pixel value, I used percentage value to space out the sub-lists. As shown on the left side of the screenshot, the content box in the sub-lists gets very small on mobile resolution if pixel left margin was used.
Relative Font Size
With relative value (eg. em or %), the font size, line-height and margin spacing can be inherited. For example, I can change the font size on all descendant elements by simply changing the font-size on the parent element.
Relative Padding
The screenshot below shows it is better to use relative percentage padding as opposed to fixed pixel padding. The box on the left shows an unbalanced padding space if pixel padding was used. The box with percentage padding on the right shows that the content area is maximized.
4. Overflow:hidden Trick (demo)
As posted in my previous article, you can clear float with the overflow property. This trick is extremely useful. You can clear the float from the previous element and keep the content running within the container by applying overflow:hidden.
5. Word-break (demo)
I also talked about the word-wrap property before. You can force unbreaking text (eg. long URL text) to wrap instead of running in a single line.
.break-word {
word-wrap: break-word;
}
Nice post hommes, good on you.
Nice post. This actually inspired me to redesign my site to be responsive. Also I heard that Google will be considering RWD in their search results!
Nice list you have here.. Keep it up dude.. cheers!!!! :)
Thanks a LOT for this tip. I wanted to make an Mobile-friendly website and it worked!
That was a superb list of things :-) good one!
thank u very munch for post.
Hey, great little guide. I created a small plugin to help with design/development of responsive sites which may help others: http://www.cleatsandcode.co.uk/2012/10/20/responsive-css-debugging-tool/?wdw
A nice and easy to follow post, keep em coming! :D
Great article, found a few typos: “opposit”, forgot the others :P
nice WDW! first time today i have been assigned to do responsive design. your post was great help. Hopefully i’ll have no blockers :-)
Great acticle, thanks for sharing!
thank you for sharing something like this
This is all I need! Thanks…
It’s a good useful css tricks for me..
nice trick
Nice bro! Very helpful. Especially liked the bit about overflow hidden and the min max width bit great post
awesome bro….. keep it up…!!
your ideas just enlighten me to develop new designs and tricks…..
:)
i have also written the article about responsive web designs. just check it out
http://s3learn.com/category/responsive-design/
very nice post,, super thanks ^^,
great tnx
How to center an item which is outside the post content.?
I just used your width:auto for IE issues and it worked perfectly. The images were being shrunk horizontally and now they appear normally. Very thankful for this as it would have taken me a long time to figure out. Appreciate your help.