Design comparison
Solution retrospective
I have implemented media query here and I have learnt a lot of things in terms of responsiveness in while doing this project.
What challenges did you encounter, and how did you overcome them?I ran into problems with resizing the image to fit the DIV.
What specific areas of your project would you like help with?Help me to write this without using media query
Community feedback
- @danielmrz-devPosted 7 months ago
Hello there!
Congrats on completing the challenge! ā
Your project looks great!
I have a suggestion about your code that might interest you:
š You can use the
<picture>
tag when you have different versions of the same image.Using the
<picture>
tag will help load the correct image to the user's device, saving bandwidth and improving performance.Example:
<picture> <source media="(min-width: 768px)" srcset="{desktop image path here}"> <img src="{mobile image path here}" alt="{alternative text here}"> </picture>
I hope this helps!
Other than that, excellent work!
0@hirakjsarmaPosted 7 months ago@danielmrz-dev Thank you, This has been really really helpful.
0 - @0xabdulkhaliqPosted 7 months ago
Hello there š. Congratulations on successfully completing the challenge! š
- I have a suggestion regarding your code that I believe will be of great interest to you.
PiCTURE TAG šø:
- " Help me to write this without using media query ", I'm here to help you with a better alternative way to handle responsive images without relying on media queries!
- This is your current code right?
<img src="./images/image-product-desktop.jpg" alt="Image of Perfume"> .left-holder img { width: 300px; border-top-left-radius: 10px; border-bottom-left-radius: 10px; } @media only screen and (max-width: 700px) { .left-holder img { max-width: 100%; margin-top: -80px; } }
- So let me introduce the
picture
element as an alternative for using media queries!
- The
<picture>
tag is commonly used for responsive images, where different image sources are provided for different screen sizes and devices, and for art direction, where different images are used for different contexts or layouts.
- Example:
<picture> <source media="(max-width: 768px)" srcset="small-image.jpg"> <source media="(min-width: 769px)" srcset="large-image.jpg"> <img src="fallback-image.jpg" alt="Example image"> </picture>
- In this example, the
<picture>
tag contains three child elements: two<source>
elements and an<img>
element. The<source>
elements specifies different image sources and the conditions under which they should be used.
- Using this approach allows you to provide different images for different screen sizes without relying on CSS, and it also helps to improve page load times by reducing the size of the images that are served to the user
- If you have any questions or need further clarification, you can always check out
my submission
and/or feel free to reach out to me.
.
I hope you find this helpful š Above all, the solution you submitted is great !
Happy coding!
0@hirakjsarmaPosted 7 months ago@0xabdulkhalid Thank You. You have been truly helpful.
0@0xabdulkhaliqPosted 7 months ago@hirakjsarma I'm glad, you found found it helpful ! š¤
0
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