| name | responsive-patterns |
| description | Use when designing complex responsive layouts — breakpoint strategy, layout shifts, content reflow, responsive typography, container queries, and ensuring the experience works across the full device spectrum |
Responsive Patterns
Responsive design is not "make it fit on a phone." It is designing for every context — one-handed on a bus, zoomed to 200% on a desktop, on a tablet in sunlight.
When to Use
- When
ui-composition defines a layout that spans breakpoints
- When the design-critic flags responsive issues
- When building anything more complex than single-column
Breakpoint Strategy
Content drives breakpoints, not devices. Do not use 768px because "that's tablet." Use the width where your content breaks.
- Start at 320px
- Widen slowly
- When the layout looks wrong — that's a breakpoint
- Name by behaviour, not device
--bp-stack: 0;
--bp-sidebar: 640px;
--bp-columns: 900px;
--bp-wide: 1200px;
Content Priority Shifting
At narrow widths, decide what gets:
- Kept — essential for the task
- Collapsed — behind a toggle
- Deferred — lower in scroll order
- Hidden — removed (last resort)
Document these decisions.
Responsive Typography
--font-size-body: clamp(1rem, 0.9rem + 0.5vw, 1.125rem);
--font-size-h1: clamp(1.75rem, 1.5rem + 1.25vw, 2.5rem);
Body text minimum 16px. Line length 45-75 characters. At 200% zoom, no horizontal scroll (WCAG 1.4.10).
Container Queries vs Media Queries
| Use case | Use |
|---|
| Page-level layout | @media |
| Component adaptation | @container |
Touch Targets
44x44px minimum at mobile. 8px minimum gap between adjacent targets.
Testing
Test at: 320px, one pixel below each breakpoint, 200% zoom at 1280px, landscape phone, and real devices.
What You Deliver
- Breakpoint definitions with rationale
- Layout behaviour at each breakpoint
- Content priority decisions
- Typography scale with clamp() values
- Touch target verification
Integration
- Informed by:
ui-composition, design-discovery
- Feeds into:
design-builder, accessibility-reviewer