You can define different CSS style sheets depending upon the device the user is browsing your site with
The recognised media types are:
- all - Suitable for all devices.
- aural - For speech synthesizers.
- braille - Intended for braille tactile feedback devices.
- embossed -Intended for paged braille printers.
- handheld - Intended for handheld devices.
- print - Used for formatting printed pages.
- projection - Intended for projected presentations, for example projectors or print to transparencies.
- screen - Intended primarily for color computer screens.
- tty - Intended for media using a fixed-pitch character grid, such as teletypes, terminals, or portable devices with limited display capabilities. Authors should not use pixel units with the "tty" media type.
- tv - Intended for television-type devices (low resolution, color, limited-scrollability screens, sound available).
You can assign a media type to a CSS declaration with the following syntax
@media print {
BODY { font-size: 12pt }
}
To assign the declaration to more than one media type:
@media print handheld{
BODY { font-size: 12pt }
}
Alternatively, and perhaps a neater solution is to create a separate style sheet for a given media type and include the following in your templates <head> (the following is taken from the beez template):
<link rel="stylesheet" href="<?php echo $this->baseurl ?>/templates/beez/css/print.css" type="text/css" media="Print" />