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Is there a way to detect if a handheld browser is used (iOS/Android phone/tablet)?

I tried this with the goal to make an element half as wide in a browser on a handheld device but it doesn't make a difference.

width: 600px;
@media handheld { width: 300px; }

Can it be done and if so how?

edit: From the referred page in jmaes' answer I used

@media only screen and (max-device-width: 480px).

4

11 Answers 11

60
+50

Here's how I did it:

@media (pointer:none), (pointer:coarse) {
}

Based on https://stackoverflow.com/a/42835826/1365066

3
  • 3
    doesn't always work. I'm using a Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro (touchscreen), external full hd monitor, Win10 1803. on Firefox 62: works (div is green), on Chrome 69: it doesn't (div is red) so again just trying to get a lucky punch with this workaround :/
    – themenace
    Sep 14, 2018 at 8:20
  • Clever solution!
    – Felipe
    Mar 25, 2020 at 22:30
  • It is hard to debug with this rule. If you plan to use this with a desktop browser and mobile view, selecting pointer on the element will un trigger any styles proposed for mobile view.
    – kalle
    Jul 13, 2021 at 10:41
45

Update (June 2016): I now try to support touch and mouse input on every resolution, since the device landscape is slowly blurring the lines between what things are and aren't touch devices. iPad Pros are touch-only with the resolution of a 13" laptop. Windows laptops now frequently come with touch screens.

Other similar SO answers (see other answer on this question) might have different ways to try to figure out what sort of device the user is using, but none of them are fool-proof. I encourage you to check those answers out if you absolutely need to try to determine the device.


iPhones, for one, ignore the handheld query (Source). And I wouldn't be surprised if other smartphones do, too, for similar reasons.

The current best way that I use to detect a mobile device is to know its width and use the corresponding media query to catch it. That link there lists some popular ones. A quick Google search would yield you any others you might need, I'm sure.

For more iPhone-specific ones (such as Retina display), check out that first link I posted.

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  • 12
    No, as devices today have the same or even higher resolution than desktop monitors, screen resolution is not the best way.
    – NaN
    Jun 17, 2016 at 11:57
  • 3
    @EASI Even though device screens may have more pixels than desktop today, they are decreased to "CSS size" through "pixel ratio", i.e. the size reported and used in CSS and media queries is n times lower than physical pixel size (with n being 1, 2, 3…) E.g. see mydevice.io/devices Of course media queries using screen size to detect device type is cumbersome, but there is not so many other options around unfortunately…
    – ghybs
    Feb 3, 2017 at 10:52
  • According to developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Media_Queries/…, the list you provided is using the no-longer-guaranteed-to-work device-width and device-height media features
    – Caleb Jay
    May 14, 2018 at 20:18
  • 1
    @CalebJay True, but first, the very reliable CSS tricks site still shows that webkit method as valid in many devices, including Iphone-10 and many new Galaxy phones! (css-tricks.com/snippets/css/media-queries-for-standard-devices). But more important, the so called "more standard" "pixel ratio" does not seem to work in the iphones I've tried. So it would seem that if (as i do) you REALLY need to make some display compensations for the mobile cases, the webkit method is a Godsend! That is, of course, until it isn't :-(
    – Randy
    Jan 6, 2019 at 23:34
14

Don't detect mobile devices, go for stationary ones instead.

Nowadays (2016) there is a way to detect dots per inch/cm/px that seems to work in most modern browsers (see http://caniuse.com/#feat=css-media-resolution). I needed a method to distinguish between a relatively small screen, orientation didn't matter, and a stationary computer monitor.

Because many mobile browsers don't support this, one can write the general css code for all cases and use this exception for large screens:

@media (max-resolution: 1dppx) {
    /* ... */
}

Both Windows XP and 7 have the default setting of 1 dot per pixel (or 96dpi). I don't know about other operating systems, but this works really well for my needs.

Edit: dppx doesn't seem to work in Internet Explorer.. use (96)dpi instead.

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  • 5
    That'll get you if the user is e.g. using a 4k monitor under windows 10 and have increased the UI size.
    – mseddon
    Apr 20, 2017 at 12:56
  • i wouldn't trust this
    – connorbode
    Feb 21, 2018 at 3:20
10

Detecting mobile devices

Related answer: https://stackoverflow.com/a/13805337/1306809

There's no single approach that's truly foolproof. The best bet is to mix and match a variety of tricks as needed, to increase the chances of successfully detecting a wider range of handheld devices. See the link above for a few different options.

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  • 2
    Haha, how bizarre that we can't detect if the user has a touchscreen or not!
    – Kokodoko
    Jun 2, 2016 at 16:40
  • 1
    @Kokodoko yeah, it does seem bizarre. To make matters more interesting, some new Windows laptops are traditional computers with touchscreens. Other devices have high resolution and are touch-screen only, like the larger iPad Pro. I'd say the best practice today is to support everything on every resolution. Jun 17, 2016 at 23:04
8

I believe that a much more reliable way to detect mobile devices is to look at the navigator.userAgent string. For example, on my iPhone the user agent string is:

Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 10_3_2 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/603.2.4 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/10.0 Mobile/14F89 Safari/602.1

Note that this string contains two telltale keywords: iPhone and Mobile. Other user agent strings for devices that I don't have are provided at:

https://deviceatlas.com/blog/list-of-user-agent-strings

Using this string, I set a JavaScript Boolean variable bMobile on my website to either true or false using the following code:

var bMobile =   // will be true if running on a mobile device
  navigator.userAgent.indexOf( "Mobile" ) !== -1 || 
  navigator.userAgent.indexOf( "iPhone" ) !== -1 || 
  navigator.userAgent.indexOf( "Android" ) !== -1 || 
  navigator.userAgent.indexOf( "Windows Phone" ) !== -1 ;
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  • 1
    This will work OK... if you only care about iPhone, Android and Windows Phone. But there are entire other device classes out there e.g. don't forget Blackberry and Opera Mini users. Opera Mini alone accounts for some 350m users. Also, older feature phone users won't match these patterns either and these are the very devices that absolutely need a mobile-specific experience. The ugly reality is that this area has gotten complex enough that simple solutions no longer work. Jun 26, 2017 at 14:58
  • 2
    Yes, you are of course correct, @RonanCremin, but you can add any other user agent string keywords that you like. (And I realize that my code could be made more efficient using a regular expression.) I also agree that such situations are often more complex than they first appear. Jun 27, 2017 at 19:17
  • You could also use .contains() instead of .indexOf() !== -1 to make it a little cleaner. Oct 17, 2022 at 21:44
  • I think you mean .includes(), don't you. I don't think that there is a .contains() method in plain JavaScript, but I see that there is such a method in Node.js. Oct 18, 2022 at 22:38
8

Here are solutions using 2 different methods:

Using CSS:

/* if device has a touch screen */
@media (any-pointer: coarse) {
    /* do your own styles */
    .yourDiv:active {
        background-color:red; 
    }
}

/* if device has no touch screen */
@media (any-pointer: fine) {
    /* do your own styles */
    .yourDiv:active {
        background-color:green; 
    }
}

Important note:
For the code to work on all devices you must use any-pointer, not pointer

Using JavaScript:

/* returns a true value if device has a touch screen no matter what 
type of device it is */ 
var isTouchScreen = 'ontouchstart' in window || navigator.msMaxTouchPoints;

if(isTouchScreen === true) {
alert("You are using a touch screen")
} else {
 alert("You are not using a touch screen")
}
5

Many mobile devices have resolutions so high that it's hard to distinguish between them and much larger screens. There are two ways to deal with this problem:

Use the following HTML code to scale the pixels (grouping smaller pixels into groups the size of the unit pixel - 96dpi, so px units will have the same physical size on all screens). Note that this will affect the scale of pretty much everything in your website, but this is generally the way to go when making sites mobile-friendly.

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">

Alternatively, measuring the screen width in @media queries using cm instead of px units can tell you if you're dealing with a physically small screen regardless of resolution.

2
  • This needs a ton more up votes! Measuring display width using pixels doesn't make sense anymore. Modern flagship handheld phones have more horizontal pixels than my 1080p computer monitor and take up 1/6th of the width. Apr 27 at 21:51
  • Unfortunately, it doesn't make any difference whether screen width is measured in px or cm. Per definition, one cm is always 37.8 (96 / 2.54) px. This may mean that on some screens a cm isn't an actual centimeter, while on others a px isn't just a single pixel. Nov 8 at 15:18
1

I would probably opt for a JS-based approach instead since there does not seem to be a reliable/uniform way of doing this with pure css.

You could use javascript to make your detection - Illustrated here: What is the best way to detect a mobile device?

Then you could simply add something like this to your clientside code:

  $("div").addClass("Mobile-Based-Class");
0

CSS Level 5 Media Queries are best for this

below code styles css for touch screen devices except old androids and windows touch screens because windows touch screens are hover-able devices with mouse pointer...

@media (hover: none) { /* css for touch screen devices except old androids and windows touch screens because windows touch screens are hover-able devices with mouse pointer... */ }
-3

I know this is an old thread but I thought this might help someone:

Mobile devices have greater height than width, in contrary, computers have greater width than height. For example:

@media all and (max-width: 320px) and (min-height: 320px)

so that would have to be done for every width i guess.

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    Won't work for mobile devices in landscape mode though.
    – evenfrost
    Jun 15, 2017 at 17:32
  • 3
    Plus, browser windows can be resized.
    – Haroldo_OK
    Dec 21, 2017 at 18:22
-8

Simple! Throw this at the like, bottom of your CSS file and this part of the CSS will be modified within a phone: -

/* ON A PHONE */
@media only screen and (max-width: 600px) { /* CSS HERE ONLY ON PHONE */ }

And voila!

2
  • Modern mobile phones can have resolutions eg. 1440 x 3200 (Galaxy S20), 1284 x 2778 (iPhone 12), etc. But due to the portrait orientation and small physical size, you'll likely want to have a mobile-friendly layout instead of a regular desktop layout. May 2, 2021 at 9:45
  • @JuhaUntinen Modern mobile phones can have resolutions eg. 1440 x 3200 -- only the physical pixels. In terms of logical pixels, which are used in css media queries, usual phones lie around 400px X 750px. The downvotes here seem to indicate that the question wants to detect if UA is mobile browser or desktop browser -- this is needed sometimes to fix the url bar causing viewport height changes.
    – user31782
    Sep 24, 2021 at 16:21

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