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From: sarah bird77 sarah on 21 Jul 2008 05:56 I have just recently created my own webite using Microsoft Office Frontpage 2003. The problem i have is that when i access my website on different computers it doesnt fit to the screen. Its always far to big and i have to scroll down to see things! How can i get my website to automatically re-size to fit different screen resolutions? Any help will be much appreciated.......
From: Ronx on 21 Jul 2008 06:46 Don't worry about scrolling down - this is expected on most sites, it is horizontal scrolling that people dislike. If you must fit your entire page into a browser window, then set the design size in FP2003 using View->Page Size Choose the smallest size your users are expected to use, but bear in mind that browser width and height has little to do with screen resolution - screen resolution sets the maximum width and height, not the minimum. Many users with wide screens have their browsers opened in a smaller window. Having set the design size, keep your page layout within the boundaries imposed. The horizontal boundaries are obvious, the vertical boundary is a thin dotted line that is easily missed. Then be aware that users will change the font size on the browsers (you have no control over this), or they will display more toolbars than expected, which combine to require vertical scrolling anyway. -- Ron Symonds - Microsoft MVP (FrontPage) Reply only to group - emails will be deleted unread. http://www.rxs-enterprises.org/fp "sarah bird77" <sarah bird77(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:4243961A-90CE-49BA-8EFD-C093E5E227F5(a)microsoft.com: > I have just recently created my own webite using Microsoft Office Frontpage > 2003. > > The problem i have is that when i access my website on different computers > it doesnt fit to the screen. Its always far to big and i have to scroll down > to see things! > > How can i get my website to automatically re-size to fit different screen > resolutions? > > Any help will be much appreciated.......
From: Murray on 21 Jul 2008 12:11 Resolution is not the critical issue. Browser viewport width is. To make your decision you need to have some ideas about the following issues - 1. What is the primary target demographic for this site? 2. What are the browsing habits of that demographic? Do they normally have their browser window maximized on the screen? 3. If they usually have their browser maximized, what is the typical screen width? 4. If they usually do NOT have their browser maximized, what is the MINIMUM screen width in that demographic. 5. How do I want to build the page? a. Fixed width and left aligned? b. Fixed width and centering? c. Flexible to fill whatever width from left to right? d. Flexible (within limits) and left aligned? e. Flexible (within limits) and centering? As you can see, this decision is probably much more complex than you thought, and will require that you know quite a bit about your intended target visitor and their browsing habits. If you elect to go with 5a, or 5b, then your decision would be - 'what is the mimimum browser width I want to support without horizontal scrolling?'. Once you have determined that minimum supported width, all of your decisions are made. That's how wide you want your page to be. If you elect to go with 5c, then you just build your page within a flexible container (the simplest example - although an obsolet one - would be to use a 100% width table to hold the entire page). Be aware that pages with limited text content can look VERY sparse and empty on wide viewports when built in this way. If you elect to go with 5d, or 5e, then you would add this sophistication to your decision matrix - 'what is the greatest width I want to allow the page and its contents to become?' In this case, you would use the CSS styles - 'min-width' and 'max-width' on the primary page container. Just so you'll know, although these styles are well supported *now*, earlier versions of IE (and some other browsers) will not support them so reliably. So - which is it? 8) -- Murray MVP Expression Web "sarah bird77" <sarah bird77(a)discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:4243961A-90CE-49BA-8EFD-C093E5E227F5(a)microsoft.com... >I have just recently created my own webite using Microsoft Office Frontpage > 2003. > > The problem i have is that when i access my website on different computers > it doesnt fit to the screen. Its always far to big and i have to scroll > down > to see things! > > How can i get my website to automatically re-size to fit different screen > resolutions? > > Any help will be much appreciated.......
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