4

I host a small web shop for a client who wants it to be easily accessible from mobile devices.

How do I detect if the user is browsing my site from a mobile device?

When I have done that, should I:

  1. Check if the user has mobile device and then forward them to another site? I think the advantages would be:

    • I can optimize layout from both sites for screensize
    • I can use different techniques in the two sites (eg. jquery mobile for mobile)
  2. Use CSS for the different screen sizes => like on tutsplus I think the advantage would be:

    • I only need one site but it seems to me heaps of work when talking about a small webshop
1

4 Answers 4

3

Ideally, you should try using jQuery Mobile page structure with your own CSS and JavaScript for non-mobile devices.

You can easily detect user's browser and conditional script includes as per html5 [boilerplate]:3

/* Grade-A Mobile Browsers (Opera Mobile, Mobile Safari, Android Chrome)
consider this: www.cloudfour.com/css-media-query-for-mobile-is-fools-gold/ */
@media screen and (max-device-width: 480px) {

Main things to consider when aiming at iPhone users:

  • ensure there's no vital flash objects on the page as it isn't supported by many mobile browsers (yet?)
  • appropriate screen size (using viewport meta tag)
  • keeping in mind that there's no mouse cursors, meaning no hover/double-clicks are available any mouse dragging gestures are different on touch devices
  • remember all pop-ups are open in new tabs and won't be seen at the same time as the main window, use javascript modal divs as alternative
  • test all your javascript and css to ensure everything looks and works the same (Safari requires -webkit- prefix for the newest CSS properties)
  • create a Home screen icon for your website (a nice thing to have)

most of these things are covered here

take a look at Safari Dev Center for tutorials/videos/coding how to's etc.

2

There are several options but this is my favorite:

Comes with a API in a couple of different languages as well

1

You don't need jQuery at all if you don't want to use it. We don't. Not that there's anything wrong with that.

Number 2 is the best option. If you create a site with mobile in mind first, it's far, far easier to expand and manipulate for the desktop than trying to shrink things to a mobile screen.

1
  • jQuery (mobile) is just an example. It seems to me that there are is a different user experience when surfing mobile.So you would start from a site for mobile devices and if the user has a screen width that is bigger then eg 480px change the formatting
    – Dante
    Jul 8, 2011 at 22:51
0

JQuery Mobile is currently in beta 1 right now. Beta 2 will be out within a month. It is fairly stable at the moment and you can gain a lot of knowledge about what is considered "best practice" from them. You can use media queries for screen sizes for different platforms which JQuery Mobile also supports.

http://jquerymobile.com/

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.