I want to add the fluid image behavior to the image displayed by the ad (Google Ads) on my site, ¿how can do this? the ad seems that is a remote content pulled by an iframe, so the Same Origin Policy "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Same_origin_policy" applies to the case of add the fluid behavior to the image (or I am wrong?), but I am not sure, so I am here on SO asking about that.
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I am creating reactjs app, from which i can generate image for different social media platforms sizes, for example facebook cover image size, user will hit click on download button and it will download an image of the desired size.
I searched lot but did nothing
Is there any way i can do this?
I have a bootstrap input field for images in my react app. When I upload an image through it, I want to get a public URL of that image so that I could reuse it in another part of the app.
<div class="mb-3">
<label for="formFile" class="form-label">Product Image</label>
<input class="form-control" type="file" id="formFile">
</div>
I've seen people connect to an API like google drive and upload the image to get a kind of shareable link. Is there a way to do that on the client side?
Thanks for the notice :)
Using google drive as a backend is one solution, their API is a good starting point. In general IMHO you want to explore the "serverless" concept. Amazon has a lot of services available in this area.
No, you have to have a publicly accessible system to serve images. That means a server.
I can't think of any way to come close this without involving some kind of 3rd party system/server. Even if you were to do something as involved as a peer-to-peer system of sharing images over WebRTC, you would still need a signalling server to make the initial connection between clients.
The way that apps work with content sharing in a generalized manner is that a user will upload an image on the front-end to some content repository. That could be your own content repository or some 3rd party site like imgur, Google Drive, etc. Once it's uploaded, a link to that publicly available content is stored by your own application and then used in some way such as being shown on a user's content board or profile.
For example, Stack Overflow itself integrates with Imgur so that whenever you need to upload an image to go along with your question/answer it is associated to your post and hosted out of imgur. SO still has to plumb all associated stuff like knowing who uploaded what and what question it's related to where to put it in the post.
Providing a complete solution would be too broad, but a possible, birds eye view could be something like:
Serve front-end however
Serve back-end that has content accepting mechanism (maybe something like Strapi
Hook the front-end up to use the content accepting endpoint
Have a main page that just shows all the images that have ever been uploaded
Bear in mind, that it's rather complicated to do all this and curating content is also a HUGE endeavor whenever you have to deal with people uploading illicit content.
According to my client's research referenced here: https://support.google.com/adsense/answer/1354762?hl=en#n2 you are only allowed one ad for Google on mobile pages.
Also in Google rules is stated that ads may not be obscured, and hence it flows that they cannot be hidden.
The problem that I am currently sitting is that the site is a single site for both desktop and mobile views, and that to the best of my knowledge, I would have to hide content on client-side to ensure that only one ad is shown on the mobile view, as opposed to the three on the desktop view.
How do I achieve 3 ads on a desktop view and only one on the mobile view for a single site, without hiding the extra 2 ads on mobile view? Please advise?
If you are using WordPress then you can use "Google Publisher plugins (https://wordpress.org/plugins/google-publisher/) .
Actually it automatically adjust ads size according to screen whatever use mobile or pc
We have a separate mobile site and a separate desktop site. There's basically a "mobile" page for each normal page like this:
public_html/home.php
public_html/m/home.php
And the m/home.php is showing up in the search results. Is it possible to make google show the normal home.php instead?
Responsive design is a good solution, but that's not the answer I am looking for at the moment.
And I don't want to 301 redirect m/home.php because people on mobile still need to view it.
Is my only option to redirect the user to home.php from m/home.php when I detect that they are not using a mobile browser?
My advice put noindex meta on your all mobile pages that's help you to prevent mobile pages getting result on Google serp then add mobile detection script on your normal site set and redirct for mobile users.
Is there a way to use responsive design principles with Google Sites. Has anyone tried that. Could you direct me to a sample site. I looked at this google help topic but then that is supposedly about exclusively mobile sites.
My main focus is a normal website which is optimized for web rather than primarily a mobile site.
Alternatively would Blogger be a better option in this case as that allows to change CSS.
I think your negative impression is right. It doesn't implement the features you'd expect in responsive design.
The key to your question is that Google Sites don't use a viewport declaration (meta viewport in the head element). If you don't have that, then device browsers treat you as a legacy desktop-only website. They assume you'll break completely below ~830px, and set a page min-width accordingly. That doesn't sound much like responsive design to me.
Google Sites don't let you write your own CSS or HTML HEAD, so you can't implement a more responsive design yourself.
To be fair, you can choose to not set a fixed page width. Also navigations buttons will reflow on relatively narrow windows, if you're using the "horizontal navigation" feature. The latter isn't great design but at least it's degrading gracefully.
There is an option "Automatically adjust site to mobile phones" under Manage site -> General. However many people suggest it's better not to use it :). I tried enabling it on an old site, previewing the page, and selecting "preview in mobile". At least on Firefox on my original netbook (800px width), it was not responsive. It didn't expand to use the 800px screen properly.
As an aside, the line-wrapping (or absence of it) is a pre-existing issue with my site. You could blame this on me for not testing it :). However it illustrates a limitation of the WYSIWYG editor in Google Sites. It doesn't show, check for, or filter out the formatting that causes this problem.
Mobile yes, responsive no.
I was messing with Google Sites today and you can make a site mobile friendly (I had to come here to get started!). I just used the "Blank Template" to mess around with.
You do need to activate (like others that have mentioned):
Options (gear icon) > Manage site > (scroll down to Mobile) Check.. Automatically adjust for mobile phones. Yeah, let's bury that option way down at the bottom!
Considering the whole mobile "push" Google implemented in the spring of 2015 this should be ON by default for any newly created Google Site.
Just selecting that option makes an OK (basic) mobile site. Not a responsive site. So on my iPhone it does scale photos correctly to fit the device and switches the main horizontal menu to the "hamburger" icon/menu. But collapsing the desktop browser window does not produce responsive results.
https://sites.google.com/site/rwstws51/
As a test, I uploaded a way too large photo (2.5mb) to see what would happen. Running the site through Google PageSpeed Insights it did not display any "optimize photos" warning, so seems to serves up an optimized photo for phones and desktops.
I guess the basic theme is actually called "Ski." I tried out the "Legal Pad" theme and it was totally borked on mobile. I think due to the header and content area background images.
To me Google Sites is ideal if you are already heavy into Google's other products... drive, docs, Google+, webmastertools, analytics, etc... As it has links to add those types of items when editing. Or need a quick site for collaborating as you can easily set the site access like YouTube,Drive items.
Also, you are very limited as to what html you can added. Trying to add a script tag gets stripped out when attempting to save. So again depending on the use there are definitely other options out there.
The answer applying to old "Classic" google sites is NO.
If you create your own custom HTML forms with apps script, you can add the #media viewports etc to the css for those pages/forms,so that helps...
but the google site frame around overrides custom css attempting
responsive design at the page level.
now a days its possible to make a responsive Google Site. since Google has enhanced this feature "Automatically adjust site to mobile phones" option in the Manage Site option button.
to find the option- go to> Manage Site> General> , in the general settings page's lower portion you can see a radio button named "Automatically adjust site to mobile phones". Just tick the radio button & u have enhanced the feature.
Refer an example site made with responsive Google site www.jyotiprokashmusic.com