Forum Moderators: phranque
Do you have any recommendations as to which style is better?
I find left-flushed sites are better if there is a lot of text to read, as the eye can focus on the left border of monitor as a reference point while scanning down, but if the site is graphics-driven then it is better to have it centered as this makes it easier to look at the graphic.
Any thoughts?
Eliz.
"What's this big empty space on the right of my screen? Is that intentional?"
Internet-savvy users have technical reasons for liking one or the other, but the average user seems to like it best if it fits the viewport, preferably fills it, and if not, centers.
This of course is with no other research other than one developer's interaction with many customers over the course of 8-10 years, but that's one of the questions I hear year after year.
From a user's POV:
the top left corner of the screen gets more eye-traffic, so impact is greater if your content is anchored there
a centered layout has no noticeable effect on readability (as long as the text block is left-justified)
often a centered layout (especially if the width is constrained, consistant, and thin) will look nicer, aesthetically
left-aligning a layout does have a measurable positive effect on ad clicks
Left-alignment seems to be the most popular overall, but centering is common in certain genres.
A quick look at top sites reveals some interesting patterns:
search engine, home: narrow & centered.
search results: full-width or wide & centered
news sites: always left-aligned.
blog/commentary sites: full-width or centered
e-commerce sites, home: left or full-width
e-commerce sites, interior: full-width