#1 Sites for phones/tablets use frameworks that adjust dynamically to
the changing dimensions of the browser window... so:
either trick the site into thinking the dimensions haven't changed or
enforce your own stylesheet (an option for computer browsers, don't
know if it is available for phone's browsers)
#2 This will be framework specific - find an example you like and find
out which framework is being used. It could be as simple as one style
in a style-sheet for narrow displays an another for wider displays. If
(on a regular monitor or laptop) you resize the browser from narrow to
wide, you can find the transition width.
Look for Eric Meyer's sites and books - I like:
http://www.csszengarden.com/
"Eric Meyer on CSS"
http://alistapart.com/
http://alistapart.com/blog/post/ten-css-one-liners-to-replace-native-apps
On Sat, Jul 26, 2014 at 6:17 PM, <
joe@actionline.com> wrote:
> On my mobile devices (and most others, I think), when changing from
> portrait to landscape viewing, the size of images and text on websites
> changes.
>
> Question #1: What can I do to make both images and text stay the same
> size in both orientations?
>
> Question #2: How can I create an html file so that an images with text
> below the image in portrait mode will change to the same size image on
> the left side of the screen with the text from below the image in
> portrait mode will appear beside the image on the right side when the
> device is rotated to landscape mode?
>
>
>
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