Adaptive web design ( AWD ) promotes the creation of different versions of web pages to better suit the user's device, compared to the single version used by other web design techniques. Adaptive web design includes many other strategies that can be combined with responsive web design.
Video Adaptive web design
Definisi
Adaptive web design is a server-side detection process that selects the design layout and size to display. All types of web design layouts can be used, including responsive layouts. Adaptive design will serve different versions of the site to different devices based on common screen size and resolution. The only difference is how the design is viewed from a collateral standpoint or device rather than a one-size-fits-all responsive web design approach (RWD) for layout. The term was first coined by Aaron Gustafson in his book Adaptive Web Design: Crafting Rich Experiences with Progressive Enhancement in May 2011.
Maps Adaptive web design
Technique
Adaptive web design uses multiple page layouts for a single web page and sometimes progressive improvement (PE). The adaptive model is a "separate mobile" layout, different from "mobile first", unobtrusive JavaScript, and progressive RWD enhancement.
"Mobile is separate", JavaScript is unobtrusive, and progressive enhancement
"Separate phone" is the same concept as "mobile first", except the AWD design layout is to have a separate basic mobile layout versus a single RWD design layout.
Basic mobile browsers do not understand JavaScript or media queries, so the recommended practice is to create basic mobile layouts and use non-annoying JavaScript and progressive enhancements for smartphones, rather than relying on graceful degradation to create complex, working-weight image sites.
Technological advancements
Adaptive design is a broad approach to web design that focuses on suitability for various interfaces rather than limiting itself to formats intended for desktop viewing. This is very important now because the smartphone search volume has exceeded desktop search volume in 10 countries, even with tablet searches counted in the desktop category. New technology has emerged, bringing changes to the overall face of web design and breathing new life into AWD as a valuable concept. This latest change makes AWD a common practice used on the web, with an estimated 70,000 new sites created every day.
Fluid-motion drag-and-drop editor
Fluid-motion editors are not HTML 5 native drag-and-drop editors and can not be used in fluid design pages. They allow the movement of fluids and objects to be placed anywhere on a web page and based on the absolute position of the object corresponding to the coordinates of XYZ coordinates of the Cartesian system. Currently, there are two editors that use this type of system and layout, WIX and Flux Live.
Benefits of editor and layout
This type of editor and layout has many benefits and is the standard layout of most high-end graphic design programs.
- Liquid movement - Allows for faster layout design
- 3D layout - Layout by XYZ coordinates of Cartesian coordinate system.
- Multi-page layout - This type of editor can have a layout for popular mobile device sizes.
- Separate phones - Separate custom layouts for mobile devices
- Print - An editor that is positioned absolutely perfect for online printing.
- Flux - Fluctuates the size of the medium size order, allowing better page scaling.
- Keep the design layout - Except the pages in the liquid layout, resizing does not affect the design.
- Zoom - This page is sometimes better served in an enlarged or scaled layout.
Layout
There are four types of modern layouts used in adaptive models: standard, responsive, scale, and flux and zoom.
Standard
AWD serves to detect the screen size and load the appropriate layout. With an adaptive standard layout, "you'll generally design an adaptive site for six common screen widths: 320, 480, 760, 960, 1200, and 1600". This type of layout can also use the responsive scale of page views. In recent years, many adaptive design designs have become popular with just two designs, mobile layouts, and desktop layouts. The two-page layout allows for custom-made mobile pages and desktop versions to improve the user experience. It has the advantage of multiple layouts for one page, allowing for design customization as far as the designer wants to retrieve it.
Responsive
Adaptive responsive layouts use fewer page layouts than adaptive standards. This approach is considered less resilient to the future than the responsive design because of the general device screen size is constantly changing. Responsive Design built on fluid vs. grid lattice fixed adaptive design . The page is formatted in the responsive web design layout, when the closest suitable layout is presented, the page will respond to the user's device.
Scaled
Scale using fluid design layout and viewport width scale. This type of layout can use pixels or absolute points.
Flux & amp; enlarge
Flux & amp; zoom maintains a web page design perspective with a high and wide scale when using the absolute position of the object. Then, target the break point from the width of the popular device screen by adjusting the scale of the upper block level object.
Flux & amp; zoom is a mirror of the fluid network responsive web layout layout that asks the page element size to be in a relative unit such as a percentage, not an absolute unit like pixels or dots.
Model
Flux & amp; zoom requires absolute units of pixels or dots and can not use relative percentage units. Typically, a two-page layout is used: desktop version and mobile version. Fluctuating zoom designs using CSS3 media requests, breakpoints for scale and width of the page to fit the user's device, this allows the nearest page layout to be enlarged or enlarged, allowing for scaling of pages beyond the linear grid, fluid model, fixed 3D page within coordinates XYZ Cartesian coordinate system. Zooms can be used with responsive layouts, enabling enlarged sections to maintain the design layout when measured.
The layer-based photo editor (digital photo editing) uses this type of model for layout and design, with XYZ Cartesian coordinate system coordinates for positioning and zooming to show the design in perspective.
Layout
Flux & amp; Zooms use two or more intermediate and fluctuating layouts - 150 pixels larger or smaller in size. Web design software already exists that provides adaptive page services and adaptive visual editors to assist in layout and design. It usually takes less time to build two designs in an adaptive flux than a responsive page, as you are not tied to the Responsive web design grid rule.
Benefits
Adaptive and adaptive zoom flux solves most of the problems found in other web design layouts but remains responsive and is the only web design layout that can support Layers (digital image editing) based design across all platforms.
Popularity
With newly released new HTML editors and page makers emerging in the marketplace, adaptive design is becoming a popular alternative for responsiveness. The difficulty of creating multiple page layouts and serving the right pages is handled by the software.
See also
- User interface
References
Source of the article : Wikipedia