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📐 A lightweight alternative to the buggy vh/vw CSS units.

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vUnit

vUnit is a vanilla JS microlib (~1000 bytes after gzip) that allows you to size elements based on the viewport dimensions, without relying on the buggy vh/vw/vmin/vmax CSS units. See a live example.

4x4 panel, 50% height and width: 4x4 panel, 50% height and width

How to use, in 3 steps

First: install using bower or npm:

bower install vunit or npm install vunit.js

Second: add the script to the <head> tag and instantiate vUnit passing a CSSMap object:

<head>
	<!-- Add vUnit.js to the head to avoid FOUC -->
	<script src="path/to/vunit.js"></script>

	<!-- Instantiate vUnit.js passing a CSSMap with properties you want to play with -->
	<script>
		new vUnit({
			CSSMap: {
				// The selector (VUnit will create rules ranging from .selector1 to .selector100)
				'.vh_height': {
					// The CSS property (any CSS property that accepts px as units)
					property: 'height',
					// What to base the value on (vh, vw, vmin or vmax)
					reference: 'vh'
				},
				// Wanted to have a font-size based on the viewport width? You got it.
				'.vw_font-size': {
					property: 'font-size',
					reference: 'vw'
				},
				// vmin and vmax can be used as well.
				'.vmin_margin-top': {
					property: 'margin-top',
					reference: 'vmin'
				}
			},
			onResize: function() {
				console.log('A screen resize just happened, yo.');
			}
		}).init(); // call the public init() method
	</script>
</head>
<body>
	<h1 class="vw_font-size15">This title font-size is 15% of the viewport width.</h1>
	<p class="vh_height50">This p's height is 50% of the viewport height.</p>
	<p class="vmin_margin-top5">This p has some margin-top<p>
</body>

Third: Add the generated classes to your HTML elements:

<h1 class="vw_font-size15">This title font-size is 15% of the viewport width.</h1>
<p class="vh_height50">This p's height is 50% of the viewport height.</p>
<p class="vmin_margin-top5">This p has some margin-top.<p>

You're done!

How it works

Viewport relative units are awesome, except they're not - they are buggy, unreliable and have inconsistent implementation across browsers. vUnit.js offers a lightweight, robust alternative for them and weighs ~600 bytes after gzip.

vUnit.js calculates the browser viewport dimensions and creates CSS rules ranging from 1% to 100% of its size. These rules are then inserted into a stylesheet which is injected on the fly to the <head> tag.

An observer running every 100ms checks if the viewport has been resized and regenerates the CSS rules accordingly. It's a cross-device, event-less solution to keep track of everything that would trigger a resize on the viewport, namely:

  • Window resizing on desktop;
  • Orientation change on mobile;
  • Scrollbars appearing/disappearing on desktop;
  • Navigation bars appearing/disappearing on mobile;
  • Zooming on mobile and desktop;
  • Download bar on desktop;
  • Password saving prompt on desktop;
  • Etc.

Pro tips

  • Load vUnit on the <head> tag to avoid FOUC.
  • Add a CSS transition on mobile, so it doesn't jitter as the address bar appears/disappears.
  • vUnit is pretty fast, but avoid bloating your CSSMap with properties you won't gonna use.
  • vUnit is not supposed to replace your grid, but to enhance your design.
  • Always consider non-JS users.

Browser support

So far, tested on:

  • IE8+
  • Chrome
  • Firefox
  • Safari
  • Chrome for Android
  • Android Browser 4.3

More to come.

TODO

  • The issues page is your friend.

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📐 A lightweight alternative to the buggy vh/vw CSS units.

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  • CSS 24.0%