how to detect, in a cross-browser compatible way, the pixel density of the device visiting a webpage so that one can either serve standard or highres images without forcing doubled images to any device?
Is there any javascript library that automates this?
how to detect, in a cross-browser compatible way, the pixel density of the device visiting a webpage so that one can either serve standard or highres images without forcing doubled images to any device?
Is there any javascript library that automates this?
Share Improve this question edited Jan 18, 2014 at 8:32 Raj 22.9k14 gold badges104 silver badges146 bronze badges asked Nov 17, 2012 at 13:01 pistacchiopistacchio 58.9k110 gold badges287 silver badges432 bronze badges3 Answers
Reset to default 18Why setting for Retina
iPhone 4s, iPhone 5, iPad3, iPad4, Macbook 15", Macbook 13" all use Retina display.
Android also support high resolution display, as well as Windows 8(Lumia 920) as mentioned by @JamWaffles.
Adding high resolution support is good for user experience but it definitely add load for developer, as well as bandwidth for mobile. Somebody don't suggest doing that.(Peter-Paul Koch, see the bottom "further reading")
Breifing
There are two methods to implement this function. One is Javascript and the other is CSS. All current solutions are for Retina, but could extend to Android high resolution easily.
CSS solution is about Media Query and -webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio
or -webkit-device-pixel-ratio
- Simple to use.
- Apply to all browsers.
- Disadvantage: Good for background. Harder for
<img>
tag
Javascript solution is about window.devicePixelRatio
property.
- Advantage: Javascript could manipulate image source. So, if you are going to serve direct image instead of background, better to use Javascript
- Could not apply to all browsers but current support is good enough. See below for list.
- Need a bit more setting.
CSS Solution
For normal images, say an icon
.sample-icon {
background-image: url("../images/sample-icon.png");
background-size: 36px 36px;
}
For Retina, add those below
@media only screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 2), /* Webkit */
(min-resolution: 192dpi) /* Everyone else */ {
.sample-icon {
background-image: url("../images/sample-icon-highres.png");
background-size: 18px 18px;
}
You can use min-resolution: 2dppx
to replace min-resolution: 192dpi
, for those who don't want to remember numbers
Note the difference:
- Two different icons, one normal, one high res. High res icon is double size than normal one.
- The background size. The later is half. But you need test it in your real use.
Resource: + http://www.w3.org/blog/CSS/2012/06/14/unprefix-webkit-device-pixel-ratio/ + http://view.jquerymobile.com/master/demos/widgets/buttons/#CustomIcons
Javascript Solution
Use window.devicePixelRatio
property to detect resolution.
if (window.devicePixelRatio >= 2) {
alert("This is a Retina screen");
//Do something to manipulate image url attribute
//for example add `@2x-` before all image urls
}
Browser Support
Safari, Android WebKit, Chrome 22+ and on Android, Opera Mobile, BlackBerry WebKit, QQ, Palm WebKit, Ref: http://www.quirksmode.org/blog/archives/2012/06/devicepixelrati.html
For Android
Android device use 1.5 as high resolution instead of 2 in Retina. http://developer.android.com/guide/webapps/targeting.html --#Targeting Device Density with CSS, #Targeting Device Density with JavaScript
Further Good Reading
http://www.quirksmode.org/blog/archives/2012/07/more_about_devi.html "I’m not a big fan of serving special retina images because it makes the web too heavy — especially over a mobile connection. Nonetheless people will do it." -- Peter-Paul Koch
Update 2013-04-18 Update jQuery mobile link
I found this:
var retina = window.devicePixelRatio > 1;
this should make retina return true, which you could use an if function to serve the right images.
Source: http://briancray.com/posts/detect-retina-displays-with-javascript
-InfiniDaZa
You need to be aware of network capabilities, responsive images and resource loading.
So far the javascript solutions are not quiet there as they generally require both resources (images) to be downloaded before the image swap.
Your best bet is background css media queries unless you go with a full solution like this: http://adaptive-images.com explained here: https://vimeo.com/38947881