TIP 25 Best Screen Resolution to Design Websites800x600? 1024x768? The oldest question in website design - 'What's the best monitor screen resolution to use when building your site? There is none! It's impossible to design a website to look the same in every browser, platform and screen resolution, so don't bother trying. Instead, use a fluid, tableless layout for your design, with % widths that expand and contract to fit a visitors browser setting. Design for the 1024x768 setting and ensure it contracts properly, or 'transforms gracefully', to the 800x600 setting. Edit 10 March 2008 - This website has had about 65,000 visitors since January 2008, and here's the breakdown of visitors by screen monitor resolution in the following chart;
You can see that most visitors on this site at least are using 1024x768, 1280x1024, 1680x1050 and 1440x900. Less than 2% of visiotrs to this site are using a small screen to access this site. I recently examined the ststa of all the websites I monitor, and I can say, that it looks as if this is reflected accross all of the sites (800x600 = 2-7% of total browsers used). We've been saying this for ages, and recently Jakob Nielsen stated: Jakob Nielsen - What Is The Best Screen SizeYour pages should work at any resolution, from 800x600 to 1280x1024 and beyond.
Optimizing for 1024x768 Screen SizesWhen we say "optimize" we mean that your page should look and work the best at the most common size. It should still look good and work well at other sizes, which is why I recommend a liquid layout using percentage widths to control layout. But it should be its best at 1024x768. The three main criteria in optimizing a page layout for a certain screen size are:
You should also consider all three criteria at the full range of sizes, continuously resizing the browser window from 800x600 to 1280x1024. Your page should score high on all criteria throughout the entire resolution range. Your page should also work at even smaller and bigger sizes, though such extremes are less important. Fewer than half a percent of users still have 640x480. Although such users should certainly be able to access your site, giving them a less-than-great design is an acceptable compromise. As the first criterion implies, scrolling is always a key consideration. Users generally don't like to scroll. So, when you design, you should consider how much users can see if they scroll only a screen full or two. Any more than five screen full's should be an indication to you that there is two much copy on the page. Both scrolling and initial visibility obviously depend on screen size: Bigger screens show more content above the fold and require less scrolling. This is where you have to optimize for 1024x768: present your most compelling material above the fold at this resolution (while ensuring that the absolutely critical information remains visible at 800x600). So, what about tiny screens, such as those found on mobile devices? A liquid design should scale all the way down to a phone, but don't assume that this is how you should deliver your company's mobile user experience. Mobile environments are special; to optimize for them, you must design a separate service that provides fewer features, is written even more concisely, and is more context aware. There is a discussion about this at AccessifyForum - or for more, visit Screen Resolution and Page Layout (July 31, 2006) at Useit.com. Remember to build a website to the size you expect most visitors to be using - some research can help you with this, but always aim to please the visitors you seem to attract! Best Layout
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