Four Theses on Responsive Design
A friend and fellow web designer and developer (indeed, someone who gets to do a lot more front-end design) recently asked me,
Chris—what do you think of “responsive” layouts? I’m not a big fan. In theory, it’s a good idea. But it makes it difficult for ad placement, and in practice, I don’t know that anyone really needs five different “views” for a site based on browser width/height.
So, some thoughts from a guy who’s done a lot of reading, a lot of watching, and – alas – a lot less actual implementation than he’d like in the last year. (In other words: take these words with a grain of salt; they’re observations on watching others in the process as much as they are born of my own experience.)
I think responsive design is a great idea, but it has to be done carefully and thoughtfully, especially when considering ad placement. The thoughtless implementations that prevail in a lot of bandwagon-riders’ sites are not good patterns: they don’t tend to work particularly well, they’re a lot of extra work, and thus the cost-benefit analysis doesn’t come out in their favor. A really good responsive design, on the other hand, is really delightful to use, and it actually shouldn’t be much more work—though it does require modifying the workflow; see point 3 below.
Another way of putting this: good design is good design (whether responsive or not), and bad design is bad design (whether responsive or not). There are lots of good designers not yet doing responsive design – though I suspect they will be soon – and lots of bad designers doing responsive design (to everyone’s chagrin).
Now, four theses born from my own experience (see the rest of this site for an implementation that I think works well, but not as well as it could – also The Invited Birth and Independent Clauses):
- Responsive is often coupled to fluid; this isn’t necessarily the best choice. Fixed widths with various breakpoints can work a lot better—especially for ad-positioning! Most responsive sites I’ve seen in the last year are also fluid (my own included), but I’ve seen a couple that are coming at things a bit more sensibly and choosing fixed widths but with different fixed widths at the various
@media
breaks. For a site like the one my friend just put up, that would make much, much more sense. - Choosing your breakpoints sensibly is pretty much everything. Me, I’d probably pick one at around
520px
(do it inems
! use a scale!), and then potentially another at about800px
(give or take a little on each). You then have three layouts, rather than five. I actually have four on this site, because I like letting the font size bump up again for much larger/higher-res screens; it just makes for a more pleasant reading experience. You can easily get away with just two (see the Dallas Theological Seminary site for a really great example of this approach): one for particularly small screens, one for everything else—essentially, a phone layout and an everything else layout, since tablets can handle regular desktop sites just fine. Were I doing design for a client like the one my friend just finished – whose site inspired this conversation – I think I’d take the same approach John Dyer did with the DTS site: a single breakpoint is pretty much perfect. - Especially when thinking about ads, it really helps to think about responsive reflow right at stage 1 of the design process. It’s much, much harder to add on at the end once the design is already done. When it’s there in the beginning, you can think about the way blocks of content relate to each other and how they should be placed at each size, and then handle your content structure accordingly (where wrapper divs go, etc.). When you do it right up front, you also have a chance to discuss with the client how and where to prioritize the ad placement at various view sizes. I think we can all agree that having ads first in the content flow for a mobile page is terrible—but in terms of usability, so is having a full desktop site, which is just hard to navigate on a phone.
-
It’s way better than the alternative of mobile-specific sites, which inevitably drop major parts of the content. I cringe every time my phone gets redirected to
m.some-site.com
, because I know I’ll inevitably want the full version of the site at some point. (I often end up using the “request desktop version of site” option in Chrome for Android.) Having a responsive layout means you never skimp on the content, just display it in a different way that makes more sense for the viewport.On a closely related note, you don’t have to deal with thinking about messy canonical URL markers on every page for a mobile site that point search robots back to the “real” page. While this isn’t too bad if you’re built your back end carefully, it’s one more piece of overhead I’m glad not to have to manage.
Some of the best writing I’ve seen on the subject has come out of the folks at Paravel – Dave Rupert, who I linked in a previous comment on retina images, being one of their guys—and there’s some great stuff by Trent Walton (another of their guys), as well.