> THIS! This is how I feel exactly! When you load up a site I do it is as well designed as a mobile app.
You appear to have missed my entire point, which is that if I try to zoom, there is no reason to prevent me from doing so, as the fact that I have tried to zoom is proof your attempt at design to meet my needs failed, and zoom might make it better, and certainly won't make it worse, while denying me will make me annoyed or angry and potentially mean I can't use your site.
I can tell you with 100% certainty that you are unable to find a font-size, for example, that will satisfy everyone, as e.g. what is comfortable for me is too small to be readable for a lot of people.
Arguably, disabling zoom might even violate disabilities protections in some jurisdictions. E.g. in the UK you are required to take reasonable steps to make your site available to people with disabilities. Disabling zoom does the opposite, by making it harder to access your site for weak sighted people.
> Surely people don't complain about the inability to zoom in their iOS settings app, or in the clocks app. Why would my site be any different?
Why do you think people won't complain if they can't zoom? The first screen magnifying application I saw was ca. 1986. And that was on a home computer where font sizes etc. could be freely adjusted up to very large sizes. People still wanted the ability to zoom to make their usage easier.
I don't know about iOS, but on Android you can turn on "magnification gestures" and zoom any app everywhere by triple-tapping the screen. At least in my version.
But for e.g. the browser, assuming you've done your job properly, then zooming in a way that allows re-layout would save a lot of weak-sighted people a lot of panning that they are forced to do if they use the built in magnification since the latter doesn't have any knowledge of the page structure.
You appear to have missed my entire point, which is that if I try to zoom, there is no reason to prevent me from doing so, as the fact that I have tried to zoom is proof your attempt at design to meet my needs failed, and zoom might make it better, and certainly won't make it worse, while denying me will make me annoyed or angry and potentially mean I can't use your site.
I can tell you with 100% certainty that you are unable to find a font-size, for example, that will satisfy everyone, as e.g. what is comfortable for me is too small to be readable for a lot of people.
Arguably, disabling zoom might even violate disabilities protections in some jurisdictions. E.g. in the UK you are required to take reasonable steps to make your site available to people with disabilities. Disabling zoom does the opposite, by making it harder to access your site for weak sighted people.
> Surely people don't complain about the inability to zoom in their iOS settings app, or in the clocks app. Why would my site be any different?
Why do you think people won't complain if they can't zoom? The first screen magnifying application I saw was ca. 1986. And that was on a home computer where font sizes etc. could be freely adjusted up to very large sizes. People still wanted the ability to zoom to make their usage easier.
I don't know about iOS, but on Android you can turn on "magnification gestures" and zoom any app everywhere by triple-tapping the screen. At least in my version.
But for e.g. the browser, assuming you've done your job properly, then zooming in a way that allows re-layout would save a lot of weak-sighted people a lot of panning that they are forced to do if they use the built in magnification since the latter doesn't have any knowledge of the page structure.