

I’m making this first tests on a Nokia 5800 using Symbian, but I think this zooming problem can be solved too, including in this Symbian smartphone.Īre there some way in CSS or HTML to avoid this responsive effect when I zoom, specially in resolutions of 320px or 400px?Ĭould I use two viewport tags?, for example: īut remember I’m not talking about an iPad or iPhone or other more modern smartphones or tablets. even the page adapts DIVs (etc) at the more narrow width on desktop browsers, the problem is when I zoom in smaller screens (smartphone), because some elements are additionally narrowed and it is so much. My page appears to be so much responsive!!!!! :) including when I zoom it! I want the elements only be zoomed when I zoom the page. It is fine, BUT……… when i zoom the page (double clicking on the screen), the page is zoomed and the browser narrows again the internal elements to the new more narrow widthĪnd I dont want the page be responsive in zoom. The test page is loaded correctly and when I rotate the phone, the page adapts it internal elements to the new width. After this I loaded the page in my NOKIA 5800 smartphone that uses Symbian. My first test page is responding correctly in all widths of the desktop browsers, including narrowing them until its smaller width. Until now the things are going slow but fine. I’m designing my first responsive website using CSS. I’m not english speaker and I will try to explain my problem in the better way I can. Thank you for your suggestion but I have one inconvenient using this tag. I'm not huge fan of preventing the user from enhancing their experience but your web application may need to stay a given size. If you'd like to see this in action, grab your phone/mobile browser and hit: The maximum scale keeps the scale settings when the user switches from portrait to landscape view. According to Mozilla, mobile browsers are generally set to a size of 320 or 480. After some research I found that preventing page zooming was as easy as adding a META tag to the page. It wasn't until recently that I noticed that some sites don't allow the user to zoom in and out of a page.
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It's not because I have any interest in checking out women's shoes, looking at flowers, or that type of stuff - it's because my iPhone lets me surf the web the whole time.or until my iPhone's tiny battery dies. Ever since I got my iPhone, I've been more agreeable in going places that my fiancee wants to go.
