The <picture>
element has a trick it can do where it shows different image formats in different situations. If all you are interested in is formats for the sake of performance, maybe you’d do:
<picture>
<source srcset="img/waterfall.avif" type="image/avif">
<source srcset="img/waterfall.webp" type="image/webp">
<img src="img/waterfall.jpg" alt="A bottom-up shot of a huge waterfall in Iceland with green moss on either side.">
</picture>
But notice those <source>
elements there… they can take a media
attribute as well! In other words, they can be used for responsive images in the sense that you can swap out the image for a different one, perhaps even one with a different aspect ratio (e.g. a wide-crop rectangle shape on a large screen vs. close-crop square shape on a small screen).
The media
attribute doesn’t have to be screen-size related though. Brad Frost documented this trick a while back:
<picture>
<source srcset="no-motion.jpg" media="(prefers-reduced-motion: reduce)"></source>
<img srcset="animated.gif" alt="brick wall">
</picture>
That is using a prefers-reduced-motion
media query to swap a GIF for a static image when less movement is preferred (a system-level choice). Clever! I saw Manuel’s tweet about it get some love the other day:
Remember our little rif on Steve Faulkner’s idea from a little while ago? Rather than entirely stopping the GIF, you can put animated and non-animated images on top of each other (inside a <details>
element) and allow them to be “played” on demand. We could alter that a smidge again and have it respect this media query by using a smidge of JavaScript:
The post GIFS and prefers-reduced-motion appeared first on CSS-Tricks.
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