uploading @2x images for mobile site

9 posts by 4 authors in: Forums > CMS Builder
Last Post: March 20, 2012   (RSS)

By petejdg - March 6, 2012

Starting my first mobile site and in looking at the iPhone retina display, from what I can see it looks for images as "imagename@2x.jpg" for a file name. In the cms admin area when you upload an image labeled this way it changes the @ to a -. Is there a way to allow for the @ symbol so I can upload images for this or is there another way?

Re: [petejdg] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By Dave - March 7, 2012

Another approach is to have your regular images as the first thumbnail in /images/thumb/ and your double size images as the second thumbnail in /images/thumb2/. Then set up a mod_rewrite rule so URL requests so when the user requests /images/thumb/anything@2x.jpg it serves up /images/thumb2/anything.jpg

Does that make sense? And what are all the images sizes you want/need to have available?
Dave Edis - Senior Developer
interactivetools.com

Re: [Jason] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By petejdg - March 12, 2012

Hi Jason,
I see where you are going with this. Trying to wrap my head around it. I think I will need for example:
image@2x.jpg (600x200 pixels)
image.jpg (300x100 pixels)

How do I actually upload both images through the cms? I see where you are renaming the regular image but I will actually need to upload both images. Not sure how renaming the regular image will help if I have to upload two images. I see Dave posted about using the thumbnail area which may work. So I can upload the larger (higher res) image as the first image, automatically create the thumbnail as the regular smaller image. That would upload /uploads/image.jpg and /uploads/thumb/image.jpg. Then how do I code it so that when an iphone 4 is looking for the image@2x.jpg it will use that and if not it will default to the image.jpg. I am trying to grasp what the iphone does vs what the php will do and make them work together. Maybe I am making it harder than it seems? I guess I am thinking both images will have to be in the same folder (for the iphone) since it is looking for one and defaults to the other. Or do I upload one image as image.jpg and one as image2.jpg and then somehow rewrite the image2.jpg to become image@2x.jpg and they both will be in the same directory?

Re: [petejdg] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By Jason - March 12, 2012

Hi,

I think Dave's solution is probably going to be the one that works for you. If you set up a mod_rewrite in your htaccess file to redirect @2x images to the thumb2 folder.

So if you upload image.jgp, and set the 2nd thumbnail to be twice as big as the first thumbnail, CMS Builder will create these 2 images for you. Then it's just a matter of outputting image@2x.jpg on your page.

Hope this helps
---------------------------------------------------
Jason Sauchuk - Project Manager
interactivetools.com

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Re: [Jason] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By petejdg - March 12, 2012

OK, I don't have any experience with mod rewrites. Any advice?

Re: [petejdg] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By Jason - March 13, 2012

Hi,

Here are some articles that should help get you started:

http://www.workingwith.me.uk/articles/scripting/mod_rewrite
http://www.theadminzone.com/forums/showthread.php?t=7779

Please let us know if you run into any problems.

Thanks,
---------------------------------------------------
Jason Sauchuk - Project Manager
interactivetools.com

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Re: [Jason] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By petejdg - March 19, 2012

Jason,
I have been struggling through this but not getting anywhere. Just not grasping how to code this. Any help?
thanks,
pete

Re: [petejdg] uploading @2x images for mobile site

By (Deleted User) - March 20, 2012

Hi petejdg,

Another approach (and potentially easier) would be to autodetect the iPad and iPhone4/4S hardware with a simple detection script (try Google's at http://code.google.com/p/php-mobile-detect/) and then load the higher res images using files without using fancy characters (which I think was Daves original idea).

It should be noted, however, that Safari automatically downsamples images being loaded (to save bandwidth) so having the higher resolution images in place of the lower resolution images may not be as beneficial as you might want (check out http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ipad-3-benchmark-review,3156-5.html). Unless you're developing a native Retina app, the higher resolution isn't really useable. Yet.

Tom

NB I'm not associated with Tom's Hardware, it's just one of those coincidences.