Mobile viewports let you preview your 51黑料不打烊 Target activities on screens of various sizes.
The mobile viewport preview feature is designed for responsive sites that render well on various devices, windows, and screen sizes. Responsive sites automatically adjust and adapt to any screen size, including desktops, laptops, tablets, or mobile phones.
NOTE
Use mobile viewports if your site is responsive and the same elements in your desktop page are used on your mobile page in a different configuration. If you have a separate mobile site with a separate structure, such as m.mysite.com, use a multipage activity instead.
Mobile viewports are not available if overlapped by a redirect offer overlay.
A viewport is defined by the size of the rectangle filled by a web page on your screen. The viewport is the size of the browser window, minus the scroll bars and toolbars. Browsers use 鈥淐SS pixels.鈥 For many devices, such as those with retina screens, the viewport is smaller than the advertised device resolution.
Below are the viewports and resolutions for popular devices. Remember to use the viewport size in Target.
NOTE
Various websites list viewport sizes for popular devices. For example, see https://viewportsizer.com/devices/. Consult the device maker鈥檚 website for the most accurate, up-to-date information.
Device
Viewport Size (width x height)
Device Resolution (width x height)
iPhone 12
390 x 844
1170 x 2532
iPhone 12 Mini
360 x 780
1080 x 2340
iPhone 12 Pro
390 x 844
1170 x 2532
iPhone 12 Pro Max
428 x 926
1248 x 2778
iPhone SE
214 x 379
640 x 1136
iPhone 11 Pro Max
414 x 896
1242 x 2688
iPhone 11 Xs Max
414 x 896
1242 x 2688
iPhone 11
414 x 896
828 x 1792
iPhone 11 Xr
414 x 896
828 x 1792
iPhone 11 Pro
375 x 812
1125 x 2436
iPhone 11 X
375 x 812
1125 x 2436
iPhone 11 Xs
375 x 812
1125 x 2436
iPhone X
375 x 812
1125 x 2436
iPhone 8 Plus
414 x 736
1080 x 1920
iPhone 8
375 x 667
750 x 1334
iPhone 7 Plus
414 x 736
1080 x 1920
iPhone 7
375 x 667
750 x 1334
iPhone 6s Plus
414 x 736
1080 x 1920
iPhone 6s
375 x 667
750 x 1334
iPhone 6 Plus
414 x 736
1080 x 1920
iPhone 6
375 x 667
750 x 1334
iPad Pro
1024 x 1366
2048 x 2732
iPad Third & Fourth Generation
768 x 1024
1536 x 2048
iPad Air 1 & 2
768 x 1024
1536 x 2048
iPad Mini
768 x 1024
768 x 1024
iPad Mini 2 & 3
768 x 1024
1536 x 2048
Nexus 6P
411 x 731
1440 x 2560
Nexus 5X
411 x 731
1080 x 1920
Google Pixel
411 x 731
1080 x 1920
Google Pixel XL
411 x 731
1440 x 2560
Google Pixel 2
411 x 731
1080 x 1920
Google Pixel 2 XL
411 x 823
1440 x 2880
Samsung Galaxy Note 5
480 x 853
1440 x 2560
LG G5
360w x 640
1440 x 2560
LG G4
360w x 640
1440 x 2560
LG G3
360w x 640
1440 x 2560
One Plus 3
480 x 853
1080 x 1920
Samsung Galaxy S9
360 x 740
1440 x 2960
Samsung Galaxy S9+
360 x 740
1440 x 2960
Samsung Galaxy S8
360 x 740
1440 x 2960
Samsung Galaxy S8+
360 x 740
1440 x 2960
Samsung Galaxy S7
360 x 640
1440 x 2560
Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge
360 x 640
1440 x 2560
Nexus 7 (2013)
600 x 960
1200 x 1920
Nexus 9
768 x 1024
1536 x 2048
Samsung Galaxy Tab 10
800 x 1280
800 x 1280
Chromebook Pixel
1280 x 850
2560 x 1700
To deliver an activity to visitors on a particular device, choose the appropriate audience for that device in the activity diagram. Use the Mobile Web Composer to edit the page in the activity for that device. To run an activity across your entire digital experience to ensure it looks good across all devices, don鈥檛 apply targeting. Instead, use mobile viewports to preview the activity on each screen size.
For responsive sites, typically your site is designed to open in a different view when accessed by a device with a specific screen size. Those screen sizes that trigger the new views are known as CSS breakpoints. CSS breakpoints are points where website content responds depending on device width to display the optimal layout to visitors. CSS breakpoints are also called .
Save your CSS breakpoints in Target so you can preview your experiences for each view you define. Each of these experiences displays in a mobile viewport in the Target interface. Open the view for each screen size by clicking that viewport along the top of the display.
If your site is not responsive, use the Mobile Web Composer to view a site if your activity is targeted to a specific device.
IMPORTANT
You can edit an experience from within mobile viewports. However, these changes apply to all viewports and devices, not just the viewport that you鈥檙e working in. Similarly, editing an experience in the normal desktop view changes the page for all screen sizes, not just the desktop view. Currently, Target does not support viewport-specific page changes.
Mobile viewport configuration task_B4B161499DC0470584ED922A4D20FCAB
Configure mobile viewports you want to make available while creating your experiences.
In the Mobile viewports configuration section, click Add.
Or
To change the configuration of an existing mobile viewport, select that viewport, then click the Edit (pencil) icon.
Type a name for the mobile viewport.
Give your mobile viewport a descriptive name that is easy to recognize. The name can be up to 36 characters long.
Specify the screen size of the mobile device, both width and height.
The width can be 150 to 968 pixels. The height can be 150 to 1280 pixels.
(Optional) Select the operating system of the device.
Options:
Android
iOS
Windows
Symbian
Blackberry
If you use the Enhanced Experience Composer and choose an operating system, Target emulates that device when you view the page. For example, if there is a different look and feel for Android than for iOS on your responsive site, Target mimics that behavior.
Click Save.
NOTE
If you attempt to delete a mobile viewport that is in use, the following message displays: 鈥淭his viewport is currently associated to one or multiple activities. You need to remove the viewport from those activities before being able to delete it.鈥
Create a responsive experience task_D6332438B5EE48CCA8AF199270F1CAEF
Add mobile viewports to your Target activities to create responsive experiences for mobile screens.