In iOS, Size Classes are groups of screen sizes that are applied to the width and height of the device screen. The two Size Classes that exist currently are Compact and Regular. The Compact Size Class refers to a constrained space. It is denoted in Xcode as wC (Compact width) and hC (Compact height).
Designing for iPhone X: 9 Tips to Create a Great-Looking Application
- Realign the interface elements.
- Don't hide the iPhone X notch.
- Remember about the iPhone X status bar.
- Keep in mind the impact of colors.
- Mind the iPhone X ratio.
- Be in love with the shape of screen.
- Think through the iPhone X landscape mode in apps.
The icons in the status bar at the top of the screen provide information about iPhone. On iPhone X and later, there are additional status icons at the top of Control Center. Cell signal The number of bars indicates the signal strength of your cellular service. If there's no signal, “No Service” appears.
The 6.1-inch display has a 1,792x828-pixel resolution at 326 ppi (pixels per inch). For comparison, the iPhone 8's resolution is 1,334x750 at the same 326 ppi, and the 8 Plus is 1,920x1,080 at 401 ppi.
It measures in at 6.1 inches and features a 1792 x 828 resolution at 326 pixels per inch. Though the iPhone 11 has an LCD instead of OLED display, Apple says it is the most advanced LCD that's been introduced in a smartphone, constructed with new engineering techniques.
Making iOS App Icons for iOS 7
| Name | Size(px) | Usage |
|---|
| 120x120 | iPhone App Icon |
| Icon-76.png | 76x76 | iPad App Icon |
| 152x152 | iPad App Icon for Retina display |
| iTunesArtwork.png | 512x512 | App Submission |
Control+click on an image to see an image's properties.
- Click Finder on your Dock.
- Find the image you want to check.
- Control+click (ctrl+click) your image. A menu appears.
- Click Get Info.
- Expand the General: section to see your image's file size.
- Expand the More Info: section to see your image's dimensions.
With the “Most Compatible” setting enabled, all iPhone images will be captured as JPEG files, stored as JPEG files, and copied as JPEG image files too. This can help for sending and sharing pictures, and using JPEG as the image format for iPhone camera was the default since the first iPhone anyway.
Tap the image you would like to resize. Tap Choose in the lower right corner. Select your image resize option at the top of the page. You have options like pixel, millimeter, centimeter, and inch.
Size wise, that's 2.6 MB. A portrait photo file size 1.28 MB and has the same pixels (3042x4032). As we mentioned earlier, sending a few photos a day crunches a substantial amount of data. For example, sending 10 iPhone photos and a 1-minute 1080p, 30fps video footage totals up to 159.6 MB.
As a general rule of thumb, a normal photo taken on a recent iPhone model (say, iPhone 6s and newer) has plenty of image size (they are natively 4032 x 3024 pixels) to create a very good quality print at 20 x 26 inches.
The launch image is visible on mobile devices when launching the app for the first time or when restarting the app. The launch image fills the whole screen for a few seconds until the app data loads and the app content is available. This bridges any gap in loading time and provides the user a seamless experience.
Control+click on an image to see an image's properties.
- Click Finder on your Dock.
- Find the image you want to check.
- Control+click (ctrl+click) your image. A menu appears.
- Click Get Info.
- Expand the General: section to see your image's file size.
- Expand the More Info: section to see your image's dimensions.
The Photo Compress app available at Google Play does the same thing for Android users. Download the app and launch it. Select the photos to compress and adjust the size by choosing Resize Image. Be sure to keep the aspect ratio on so the resizing doesn't distort the height or width of the photo.
At 13.18MB per photo, 5 HDR photos a day, you could use up that entire amount in under 6 months.
Accessories included with iPhone. EarPods with Lightning Connector (iPhone 7 and later) Use the headset to listen to music and videos, and make phone calls. See Use Apple EarPods. USB-C to Lightning Cable (iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone 11 Pro Max) Use the cable to connect iPhone to the USB-C power adapter or to a computer.
The iPhone 11 and 11 Pro aren't fully waterproof, but are water resistant enough to survive a splash of coffee or get dunked in the pool. According to Apple, the iPhone 11 is rated IP68, which means it's water resistant in up to 6.5 feet (2 meters) of water for 30 minutes.
But there's a difference between Apple and Samsung's ultra-wide-angle cameras. Samsung's offers a 123-degree field of view, while Apple's is slightly narrower at 120 degrees. Apple's telephoto lens, however, has a lower aperture of f/2.0 compared to the Galaxy S10's, which has an aperture of f/2.4.
The iPhone 11 will retail for $699. The iPhone 11 Pro will retail for $999, and the 11 Pro Max will retail for $1,099.
Here's what's included inside the iPhone 11 box:
EarPods with Lightning Connector. Lightning-to-USB cable. 5W USB Power Adapter. Phone documentation.Yes, the iPhone 11 Pro's new Super Retina XDR displays are brighter and more colorful than anything Apple has ever built, but if you simply prefer a larger panel, the Galaxy Note 10 beats the iPhone 11 Pro. The regular Galaxy Note 10 has a 6.1-inch AMOLED screen and the Note 10 Plus sports a huge 6.8-inch display.
iPhone 11 is not compatible with existing micro-SIM cards.
The iPhone 11, iPhone 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max are Apple's new flagship smartphones, featuring the new 'Pro' design and specifications, including upgraded camera, display and processor. As their predecessors, all the three devices have been confirmed integrating Qi-Certified wireless charging.
The iPhone 11 has an LCD screen (left) while the Pixel 4 has an OLED display. The Pixel 4 does have a trick up its sleeve, however, and that's its display. It has a higher pixel density, so it's technically sharper, and it's an OLED screen, which makes black hues a tad inkier and deeper than the iPhone 11.