CSS media queries - width versus device-width
In CSS media the difference between width and device-width can be a bit muddled, so lets expound on that a bit. device-width refers to the width of the device itself, in other words, the screen resolution of the device.Lets say your screen's resolution is 1440 × 900. This means the screen is 1440 pixels across, so it has a device-width of 1440px. Most mobile phones have a device-width of 480px or lower, including the popular iPhone 4 (with device-width: 320px), despite it technically having a 640 × 960 resolution.
This is due to iPhone 4's retina display, which crams two device pixels into each CSS pixel on the screen. This is true for the Ipad 3 as well; its reported device-width is 768px just like its predecessors, even though its actual screen resolution is 1536px x 2048px.
In general width is more versatile when it comes to creating responsive webpages, though device-width is useful when you wish to specifically target mobile devices (and not desktops with a small browser window for example), as rarely do desktops have screen resolutions below a certain number such as 320px x 480px.
read more at:
http://www.javascriptkit.com/dhtmltutors/cssmediaqueries2.shtml
#css - #design - #responsive
From JR's : articles
197 words - 1222 chars 
 - 1 min read
created on  
updated on  
import date 2013-08-12 21:49:43
 - #
 source
 - versions
 - backlinks
 
Related articles
CSS, HTML, Javascript, jQuery, jQuery Mobile, Typography, Accessibility, and Responsive Design Info  - Sep 25, 2013
 
Interesting and related Treehouse online classes  - May 08, 2013
 
Fluidity.css  - Mar 17, 2014
 
Breaking the web in 2014 - 2016  - May 31, 2016
 
Mar 23, 2015 links  - Mar 23, 2015
 
more >>