I understood how I change CSS via media queries (such as media="screen and (max-width:640px)")

but let's say I want to write (just for example)

<div>
[if screen resolution is lower then 960 px]
    <div>
    some new text only for lower resolution
    </div>
[end of condition]
</div>

What is the condition I need to write to get it right?

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53% accept rate
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I would suggest hiding that element with CSS, and then use media queries (which you are already using) to show it on lower resolutions. Is there any reason you aren't doing that? – Jan Hančič Nov 28 '11 at 10:22
Is this to display something different depending on whether its a PC or mobile device? – Ash Burlaczenko Nov 28 '11 at 10:25
@Alon, please review answers to your's older questions and mark valid answers to improve your accept rate. This way you can expect more answers. – Petr Abdulin Nov 28 '11 at 10:25
The main goal is to seperate mobile from desktop. I just wanted to know if this is possible and if this is conventional. I guess by all the answers that it is best to do it with css – Alon Nov 28 '11 at 10:42
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4 Answers

up vote 2 down vote accepted

As far as i have experienced, you cannot do media queries inside HTML pages. You need to do it from within your CSS.

But if you want to show some special text only when it is below a certain resolution, why not only make it visible when the resolution is lower than 960px?

Creating responsive designs is very different from a regular design, because you have to think a lot more (which is haaard)

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I haven't thought of the display:none option - I think that should do the work – Alon Nov 28 '11 at 10:38
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You need to assign an id (or a class or any other way of finding your element from CSS) to the <div> and then you can set a media query definition like this:

<div id="mydiv">...</div>
<style type="text/css">
@media screen and (min-width: 961px) {
   div#mydiv { display: none }
}
</style>

Or for better readability: Make it hidden on default and visible if max-width: 960px.

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It doesn't have to be an ID, it can be anything to allow the OP to target the element. I suspect I'd use a class so that I could put more than one of these on a page if I wanted to. – T.J. Crowder Nov 28 '11 at 10:26
True. It just looked so specific that I thought an ID to be the best choice...but yeah...a class or just a tag hierarchy would also work if the circumstances allow it. – Till Helge Helwig Nov 28 '11 at 10:27
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you can check it via using javascript screen object :

screen.width 

or you can do this with css

<link rel="stylesheet" media="screen and (min-device-width: 800px)" href="800.css" />

http://css-tricks.com/6206-resolution-specific-stylesheets/ http://www.javascriptkit.com/howto/newtech3.shtml

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I could be wrong, but I think css selection by resolution would need a little help from javascript.

Here is a quick example of what that js could look like, embedded in jquery:

$(document).ready(function() {

  if ((screen.width>=1024) && (screen.height>=768)) {
   alert('Screen size: 1024x768 or larger');  
   $("link[rel=stylesheet]:not(:first)").attr({href : "detect1024.css"});
 }
  else  {
    alert('Screen size: less than 1024x768, 800x600 maybe?');
    $("link[rel=stylesheet]:not(:first)").attr({href : "detect800.css"});
  }
});

Hope that helps.

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