21

This: enter image description here

Turns in to this on smaller viewports:

enter image description here

I think it looks yucky and it takes up a lot of space too.

This is standard pagination html:

<div class="container">
       <div class="text-center">
          <ul class="pagination pagination-lg">
             <li><a href="#">&laquo;</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">1</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">2</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">3</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">4</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">5</a></li>
             <li class="disabled"><span>...</span></li>
             <li><a href="#">12</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">13</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">14</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">15</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">16</a></li>
             <li><a href="#">&raquo;</a></li>
          </ul>
       </div>
    </div>

Now, I could use smaller versions with the classes they provide, however everything -- no matter what -- should be friendly for fat fingers because some touch devices just as big as desktop devices.

6
  • Hallo Lady what is this? and why are you answering you own (question) is it a kind of tutorial ? Sep 14, 2014 at 21:26
  • @Tambo stackoverflow.com/help/self-answer Sep 14, 2014 at 21:28
  • @Christina i know that what i am asking is, are you looking for some help or are you just posting this to help others? Sep 14, 2014 at 21:30
  • 1
    @Tambo: It's not uncommon to answer your own questions. I do it a lot since I care more than anyone else. Yes, it's to help others.
    – Christina
    Sep 14, 2014 at 21:31
  • Rather, I do it if I know the answer, sometimes I don't.
    – Christina
    Sep 14, 2014 at 21:32

4 Answers 4

18

In my opinion toggling the pagination is a helper but not the final solution. I found a bootstrap plugin that does exactly what I expect pagination to do at smaller screen sizes - it shrinks the number of paginated li chunks to match the screen width like this:

wide screen size medium screen size small screen size

rPage - responsive bootstrap3 pagination plugin

2
  • Yes! That is much better than what I came up with. Thanks for sharing.
    – Christina
    Aug 1, 2015 at 22:03
  • 2
    Functionally awesome. But, on mobile, this plugin was causing some serious lagging, for me.
    – MastaBaba
    Nov 16, 2015 at 15:27
16

You can use class="hidden-xs":

Normal

< 1 2 3 4 [5] 6 7 8 9 10 >

Small

< 4 [5] 6 >

Example in php

if($number != $page) { echo ' class="hidden-xs" '; }
0
6

DEMO: http://jsbin.com/cotopu/1

enter image description here

CSS:

/* pagination-responsive */
@media (min-width:0px) and (max-width:650px) { 
    .toggle-pagination {
        display: block
    }
    .toggle-pagination.active i:before {
        content: '\2212'
    }
    .pagination-responsive {
        width: 100%;
        margin-top: 10px;
        display: none;
    }
    .pagination-responsive > li > a,
    .pagination-responsive > li > span {
        width: 100%;
        margin: 0;
        line-height: 40px;
        padding: 0;
        border-radius: 0px!important;
    }
    .pagination-responsive > li {
        float: left;
        width: 20%;
        margin-top: -1px;
        text-align: center;
    }
}
@media (max-width:480px) { 
    .pagination-responsive > li {
        width: 33%
    }
}
@media (max-width:320px) { 
    .pagination-responsive > li {
        width: 50%
    }
}
@media (min-width:651px) { 
    .toggle-pagination {
        display: none
    }
    .pagination-responsive {
        display: inline-block!important
    }
}

HTML:

<div class="container">
   <div class="text-center">
     <a class="btn btn-default btn-block toggle-pagination"><i class="glyphicon glyphicon-plus"></i> Toggle Pagination</a>
      <ul class="pagination pagination-responsive pagination-lg">
         <li><a href="#">&laquo;</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">1</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">2</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">3</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">4</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">5</a></li>
         <li class="disabled"><span>...</span></li>
         <li><a href="#">12</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">13</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">14</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">15</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">16</a></li>
         <li><a href="#">&raquo;</a></li>
      </ul>
   </div>
</div>

jQuery:

$(document).ready(function() {
// show-pagination
    $('.toggle-pagination').click(function(f) {
        $(this).next('.pagination-responsive').slideToggle();
        $(this).toggleClass('active');
        f.preventDefault()
    });
});
1
  • I noticed putting two within the same container back to back, they'd overlap. Thought it was a JS problem at first but ended up needing to add .pagination-responsive { overflow: hidden; } to the css. Was putting two on a page to see if that would work, incase I ever did one at the top and another one on the bottom.
    – Keverw
    Jul 6, 2015 at 5:37
0

The following will do the trick. Pagination will be responsive on all devices with same amount of pages.

.pagination {
    display: table;
    width: 100%;
}
.pager li, .pagination>li {
    display: inline;
    display: table-cell;
}
.pagination>li>a,
.pagination>li>span {
    width: 100%;
    text-align: center;
}

Additionally you can play with .hidden-xs, .hidden-md classes or with @media queries to get more flexibility.

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