What the visual difference between DPR: 1.0, DPR: 2.0, DPR: 3.0 for human eyes?
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For example :
I have thumbnail of image in fixed size block 250x250px.
And three images:
<img sizes = "250px"
src = "image-250w.jpg"
srcset = "image-250w.jpg 250w,
image-500w.jpg 500w,
image-750w.jpg 750w"
>
So browser pick candidate 250w for device with DPR: 1.0, 500w for device with DPR: 2.0 and 750w for device with DPR: 3.0.
So what the visual difference between these DPR 1,2,3 for human eyes?
I don't have devices(iPhone, etc.) with different DPR to see this. And device emulations can't show me this while I do it on same display.
html image responsive-images srcset devicepixelratio
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up vote
0
down vote
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For example :
I have thumbnail of image in fixed size block 250x250px.
And three images:
<img sizes = "250px"
src = "image-250w.jpg"
srcset = "image-250w.jpg 250w,
image-500w.jpg 500w,
image-750w.jpg 750w"
>
So browser pick candidate 250w for device with DPR: 1.0, 500w for device with DPR: 2.0 and 750w for device with DPR: 3.0.
So what the visual difference between these DPR 1,2,3 for human eyes?
I don't have devices(iPhone, etc.) with different DPR to see this. And device emulations can't show me this while I do it on same display.
html image responsive-images srcset devicepixelratio
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
up vote
0
down vote
favorite
For example :
I have thumbnail of image in fixed size block 250x250px.
And three images:
<img sizes = "250px"
src = "image-250w.jpg"
srcset = "image-250w.jpg 250w,
image-500w.jpg 500w,
image-750w.jpg 750w"
>
So browser pick candidate 250w for device with DPR: 1.0, 500w for device with DPR: 2.0 and 750w for device with DPR: 3.0.
So what the visual difference between these DPR 1,2,3 for human eyes?
I don't have devices(iPhone, etc.) with different DPR to see this. And device emulations can't show me this while I do it on same display.
html image responsive-images srcset devicepixelratio
For example :
I have thumbnail of image in fixed size block 250x250px.
And three images:
<img sizes = "250px"
src = "image-250w.jpg"
srcset = "image-250w.jpg 250w,
image-500w.jpg 500w,
image-750w.jpg 750w"
>
So browser pick candidate 250w for device with DPR: 1.0, 500w for device with DPR: 2.0 and 750w for device with DPR: 3.0.
So what the visual difference between these DPR 1,2,3 for human eyes?
I don't have devices(iPhone, etc.) with different DPR to see this. And device emulations can't show me this while I do it on same display.
html image responsive-images srcset devicepixelratio
html image responsive-images srcset devicepixelratio
edited Nov 15 at 1:34
Josh Lee
117k23210241
117k23210241
asked Nov 11 at 22:10
niceday
182112
182112
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1 Answer
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I did a quick google & found that to simulate DPR effect on a standard display, you need to set the DPR to 2 and scale the viewport by zooming. A 2x asset will continue to look sharp, while a 1x one will look pixelated.
This way you can visually test the difference between different DPR values.
For further reference, you can see this https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/device-mode/emulate-mobile-viewports#device_pixel_ratio_dpr
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1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
I did a quick google & found that to simulate DPR effect on a standard display, you need to set the DPR to 2 and scale the viewport by zooming. A 2x asset will continue to look sharp, while a 1x one will look pixelated.
This way you can visually test the difference between different DPR values.
For further reference, you can see this https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/device-mode/emulate-mobile-viewports#device_pixel_ratio_dpr
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
I did a quick google & found that to simulate DPR effect on a standard display, you need to set the DPR to 2 and scale the viewport by zooming. A 2x asset will continue to look sharp, while a 1x one will look pixelated.
This way you can visually test the difference between different DPR values.
For further reference, you can see this https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/device-mode/emulate-mobile-viewports#device_pixel_ratio_dpr
add a comment |
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
up vote
1
down vote
accepted
I did a quick google & found that to simulate DPR effect on a standard display, you need to set the DPR to 2 and scale the viewport by zooming. A 2x asset will continue to look sharp, while a 1x one will look pixelated.
This way you can visually test the difference between different DPR values.
For further reference, you can see this https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/device-mode/emulate-mobile-viewports#device_pixel_ratio_dpr
I did a quick google & found that to simulate DPR effect on a standard display, you need to set the DPR to 2 and scale the viewport by zooming. A 2x asset will continue to look sharp, while a 1x one will look pixelated.
This way you can visually test the difference between different DPR values.
For further reference, you can see this https://developers.google.com/web/tools/chrome-devtools/device-mode/emulate-mobile-viewports#device_pixel_ratio_dpr
answered Nov 12 at 5:21
AssaultKoder95
636
636
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