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Responsive Web Design - Images

Using The width Property

If the width property is set to a percentage and the height property is set to "auto", the image will be responsive and scale up and down:

img {  
width: 100%;
height: auto;
}
note

A better solution, in many cases, will be to use the max-width property instead.

Using The max-width Property

If the max-width property is set to 100%, the image will scale down if it has to, but never scale up to be larger than its original size:

img {  
max-width: 100%;
height: auto;
}

Add an Image to The Example Web Page

img {  
width: 100%;
height: auto;
}

Background Images

Background images can also respond to resizing and scaling.

Here we will show three different methods:

  1. If the background-size property is set to "contain", the background image will scale, and try to fit the content area. However, the image will keep its aspect ratio (the proportional relationship between the image's width and height):

Example Responsive Web Design background images

Here is the CSS code:

div {  
width: 100%;
height: 400px;
background-image: url('img_flowers.jpg');
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-size: contain;
border: 1px solid red;
}
  1. If the background-size property is set to "100% 100%", the background image will stretch to cover the entire content area:

Example Responsive Web Design background-size images

Here is the CSS code:

div {  
width: 100%;
height: 400px;
background-image: url('img_flowers.jpg');
background-size: 100% 100%;
border: 1px solid red;
}
  1. If the background-size property is set to "cover", the background image will scale to cover the entire content area. Notice that the "cover" value keeps the aspect ratio, and some part of the background image may be clipped:

Example Responsive Web Design background-size images

Here is the CSS code:

div {  
width: 100%;
height: 400px;
background-image: url('img_flowers.jpg');
background-size: cover;
border: 1px solid red;
}

Different Images for Different Devices

A large image can be perfect on a big computer screen, but useless on a small device. Why load a large image when you have to scale it down anyway? To reduce the load, or for any other reasons, you can use media queries to display different images on different devices.

Here is one large image and one smaller image that will be displayed on different devices:

Example Responsive Web Design different images

/* For width smaller than 400px: */  
body {
background-image: url('img_smallflower.jpg');
}

/* For width 400px and larger: */
@media only screen and (min-width: 400px) {
body {
background-image: url('img_flowers.jpg');
}
}

You can use the media query min-device-width, instead of min-width, which checks the device width, instead of the browser width. Then the image will not change when you resize the browser window:

/* For devices smaller than 400px: */  
body {
background-image: url('img_smallflower.jpg');
}

/* For devices 400px and larger: */
@media only screen and (min-device-width: 400px) {
body {
background-image: url('img_flowers.jpg');
}
}

The HTML <picture> Element

The HTML <picture> element gives web developers more flexibility in specifying image resources.

The most common use of the <picture> element will be for images used in responsive designs. Instead of having one image that is scaled up or down based on the viewport width, multiple images can be designed to more nicely fill the browser viewport.

The <picture> element works similar to the <video> and <audio> elements. You set up different sources, and the first source that fits the preferences is the one being used:

<picture>  
<source srcset="img_smallflower.jpg" media="(max-width: 400px)">
<source srcset="img_flowers.jpg">
<img src="img_flowers.jpg" alt="Flowers">
</picture>

The srcset attribute is required, and defines the source of the image.

The media attribute is optional.

You should also define an <img> element for browsers that do not support the <picture> element.