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Start your free trialDani Ivanov
10,732 PointsWhen and where to best use absolute and relative units.
So I have been playing with this nearly the whole afternoon and I still don't know when is best to use em, when px. and when percentages.
For responsive layout:
Which measurement unit is best to use on; margin, padding, width, height, and font-size to achieve a layout that is completely responsive ? By responsive I mean a layout that resizes according to the device's screen width.
1 Answer
Michael Williams
13,005 PointsDani Ivanov,
In regards to responsive design and planning for mobile first, the common practice that I have seen and have began to become accustomed to, is to layout your page with px (absolute).
Once you have everything set and you begin to set your break points with the media queries, you will then begin the conversions on a case-by-case basis. These conversions can include em (relative) units for font-size and percentage (relative) units for everything else, as needed. Converting the height is a case-by-case situation for example. There are definitely more options for units but these are the main three.
I understand how you are feeling because I wanted nothing more than to understand how to make responsive websites. What I have learned is there are steps to take before it becomes responsive. Consider how some websites begin with a design on Photoshop. In order to bring this to life with HTML & CSS and to get it to look just like the Photoshop design, everything will be static or absolute. Then the relative units come into play for response to the various screen sizes.
The courses "CSS Layout Techniques" and "Build a Responsive Website" take a deeper dive into these conversions.
Regards, Michael Williams
Dani Ivanov
10,732 PointsDani Ivanov
10,732 PointsThanks for explaining! Seems logical.