When you are creating your HTML pages and following the responsive design patterns that restrict tags to structural as much as possible, you have already laid the groundwork to support mobile devices.
When all of your page content is broken down into logical pieces, and those pieces have ID and/or class attributes, we will be able to show, hide, or reposition those elements using CSS. When we determine the screen dimensions the user has on their device, we can decide what or how to show content from our regular page. The key to this, of course, are the ID and class tags. Anything that you may want or need to control (move, alter, edit, etc.) as a single piece by itself should have an ID tag. Elements that will share the same changes (for example, pictures, links, paragraphs, etc.) should have the same class or classes so they can be changed at the same time.
A single element, say a paragraph in a group of paragraphs, can have both an ID and a class, and can receive style changes from CSS due to both. We will get to this in more depth in CSS, but keep it in mind as you build pages now so they are ready for you later.
If you are reading this chapter looking for examples on HTML5 support of things like Geolocation, these will be found in the JavaScript section as they require the use of a scripting language to function, and are not available through HTML markup.
Important considerations for mobile development go beyond styling changes and begin to include performance measures as well, since mobile devices often lack computing power that can match a desktop or laptop’s capacity. Skipping some of your fancier animations or large background images to trim down your loading times is another responsive-style adjustment to your site alongside other CSS changes. See the resources below for some examples of methods that may help your site improve response times.
Learn more
Keywords, search terms: Mobile optimization, mobile performance
Optimization tips and tools http://www.html5rocks.com/en/mobile/
Compatibility Charting: http://mobilehtml5.org/
Test your browser(s): http://html5test.com
Follow new developments: http://www.mobilexweb.com/
Candela Citations
- The Missing Link. Authored by: Michael Mendez. Provided by: Open SUNY Textbooks. Located at: https://textbooks.opensuny.org/the-missing-link-an-introduction-to-web-development-and-programming/. License: CC BY-NC-SA: Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike