I'm currently developing a responsive site using Twitter Bootstrap.
The site has a full screen background image across mobile/tablet/desktop. These images rotate and fade through each, using two divs.
It's nearly perfect, except one issue. Using iOS Safari, Android Browser or Chrome on Android the background jumps slightly when a user scrolls down the page and causes the address bar to hide.
The site is here: http://lt2.daveclarke.me/
Visit it on a mobile device and scroll down and you should see the image resize/move.
The code I'm using for the background DIV is as follows:
#bg1 {
background-color: #3d3d3f;
background-repeat:no-repeat;
background-attachment:fixed;
background-position:center center;
-webkit-background-size: cover;
-moz-background-size: cover;
-o-background-size: cover;
background-size: cover; position:fixed;
width:100%;
height:100%;
left:0px;
top:0px;
z-index:-1;
display:none;
}
All suggestions welcome - this has been doing my head in for a while!!
This issue is caused by the URL bars shrinking/sliding out of the way and changing the size of the #bg1 and #bg2 divs since they are 100% height and "fixed". Since the background image is set to "cover" it will adjust the image size/position as the containing area is larger.
Based on the responsive nature of the site, the background must scale. I entertain two possible solutions:
1) Set the #bg1, #bg2 height to 100vh. In theory, this an elegant solution. However, iOS has a vh bug (http://thatemil.com/blog/2013/06/13/viewport-relative-unit-strangeness-in-ios-6/). I attempted using a max-height to prevent the issue, but it remained.
2) The viewport size, when determined by Javascript, is not affected by the URL bar. Therefore, Javascript can be used to set a static height on the #bg1 and #bg2 based on the viewport size. This is not the best solution as it isn't pure CSS and there is a slight image jump on page load. However, it is the only viable solution I see considering iOS's "vh" bugs (which do not appear to be fixed in iOS 7).
var bg = $("#bg1, #bg2");
function resizeBackground() {
bg.height($(window).height());
}
$(window).resize(resizeBackground);
resizeBackground();
On a side note, I've seen so many issues with these resizing URL bars in iOS and Android. I understand the purpose, but they really need to think through the strange functionality and havoc they bring to websites. The latest change, is you can no longer "hide" the URL bar on page load on iOS or Chrome using scroll tricks.
EDIT: While the above script works perfectly for keeping the background from resizing, it causes a noticeable gap when users scroll down. This is because it is keeping the background sized to 100% of the screen height minus the URL bar. If we add 60px to the height, as swiss suggests, this problem goes away. It does mean we don't get to see the bottom 60px of the background image when the URL bar is present, but it prevents users from ever seeing a gap.
function resizeBackground() {
bg.height( $(window).height() + 60);
}