I am trying to do some css styling in a stylesheet for a JavaFX scene.
It is going to be loaded upon opening the scene, and targets all the "basic" elements of a scene.
My problem is that i can't seem to find the right combination of code, to change the background color, of the button in a standard JavaFX checkbox.
This is where i am now:
.check-box:selected{
-fx-background-color: #00FF00;
}
I have tried some variants of the above, like
.check-box .button{
-fx-fill: #00FF00;
-fx-background-color: #00FF00;
}
and others, but without success.
So in general, how do i access a button in a checkbox?
Thank you in advance :-)
The parts of the CheckBox to apply the -fx-background-color to are .box and .box > .mark in case you want to change the mark color:
.check-box:selected > .box {
/* background color for selected checkbox */
-fx-background-color: lime;
}
.check-box > .box {
/* background color of unselected checkbox */
-fx-background-color: red;
}
.check-box:selected > .box > .mark,
.check-box:indeterminate > .box > .mark {
/* modify mark color */
-fx-background-color: blue;
}
I have code like:
#header button active:hover, #footer button active:hover {
color: purple;
}
Instead of having to list all the sub-classes/elements when only #header/#footer are different, is it possible to do something like:
(#header|#footer) button active:hover {
color: purple;
}
Yeah there's a matches pseudo class, but if you're hoping it will save you some typing it still needs vendor prefixes you'd have to duplicate and the support isn't great.
:matches(#header, #footer) button active:hover {
color: purple;
}
:-webkit-any(#header, #footer) button active:hover {
color: purple;
}
:-moz-any(#header, #footer) button active:hover {
color: purple;
}
So as you can see it ends up being more verbose than just adding the comma and another selector at the moment.
If I have a blue div that someone else owns the code for
.stuff {
background-color: blue;
}
And I want it to be red on hover
.stuff:hover {
background-color: red;
}
But then I want to be able to add a class for it to go back to its non-pseudo-class state:
.stuff.otherclass:hover {
background-color: unset; /* Want blue in this case */
}
Is there a CSS option of going back to a pre-pseudo-class state?
Codepen demo:
http://codepen.io/anon/pen/EyEWww
The only way to roll back the cascade is using the revert keyword, but it rolls back to another origin.
There is no way to make the 2nd value in the output of the cascade become the cascaded value, ignoring the winner.
Instead, you can modify your selector and use the :not() pseudo class:
.stuff {
background-color: blue;
}
.stuff:not(.otherclass):hover {
background-color: red;
}
Or, alternatively, take advantage of .stuff.otherclass:hover having more specificity than .stuff:hover
.stuff, .stuff.otherclass:hover {
background-color: blue;
}
.stuff:hover {
background-color: red;
}
I've managed to change the Logo the way I want it using Logo using CSS but I'm struggling to figure out how to change the hover color of it.
I want to change the TEST color on hover from blue to something else
http://test.peterstavrou.com/
At the moment my CSS code is
header#top #logo {
letter-spacing: 2px;
font-size: 35px;
}
your Logo-Text is a link so you should use css-syntax for styling links:
a#logo:link { color: #fff; } /* a Link that has not been clicked yet */
a#logo:visited { color: #fff; } /* a link that has been clicked before */
a#logo:hover { color: #ff0; } /* a link on hover/rollover */
a#logo:active { color: #ff0; } /* a link that is just clicked */
Just do something like:
Solutions 1 Find the logo hover css and change the color property value to whatever color you want
color: red!important; /* change the property value to the color you want */
Solution 2 Create another hover CSS and force a change as shown below, if the above doesn't work
#logo:hover {
color: red!important;
}
Note: Make sure the code above is at the very bottom of your css file. that way, it will override the previous hover property defined, even if it has important
Add this below the code for header#top #logo { ... } that your sample is showing in the CSS.
header#top #logo:hover
{
color:red;
}
Two questions:
I am trying to make the placeholder text white. But it doesn't work. I am using Bootstrap 3. JSFiddle demo
Another question is how do I change placeholder color not globally. That is, I have multiple fields, I want only one field to have white placeholder, all the others remain in default color.
html:
<form id="search-form" class="navbar-form navbar-left" role="search">
<div class="">
<div class="right-inner-addon"> <i class="icon-search search-submit"></i>
<input type="search" class="form-control" placeholder="search" />
</div>
</div>
</form>
css:
.right-inner-addon {
position: relative;
}
.right-inner-addon input {
padding-right: 30px;
background-color:#303030;
font-size: 13px;
color:white;
}
.right-inner-addon i {
position: absolute;
right: 0px;
padding: 10px 12px;
/* pointer-events: none; */
cursor: pointer;
color:white;
}
/* do not group these rules*/
::-webkit-input-placeholder { color: white; }
FF 4-18
:-moz-placeholder { color: white; }
FF 19+
::-moz-placeholder { color: white; }
IE 10+
:-ms-input-placeholder { color: white; }
Assign the placeholder to a class selector like this:
.form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder { color: white; } /* WebKit, Blink, Edge */
.form-control:-moz-placeholder { color: white; } /* Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 */
.form-control::-moz-placeholder { color: white; } /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */
.form-control:-ms-input-placeholder { color: white; } /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */
.form-control::-ms-input-placeholder { color: white; } /* Microsoft Edge */
It will work then since a stronger selector was probably overriding your global. I'm on a tablet so i cant inspect and confirm which stronger selector it was :) But it does work I tried it in your fiddle.
This also answers your second question. By assigning it to a class or id and giving an input only that class you can control what inputs to style.
There was an issue posted here about this: https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/issues/14107
The issue was solved by this commit: https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/commit/bd292ca3b89da982abf34473318c77ace3417fb5
The solution therefore is to override it back to #999 and not white as suggested (and also overriding all bootstraps styles, not just for webkit-styles):
.form-control::-moz-placeholder {
color: #999;
}
.form-control:-ms-input-placeholder {
color: #999;
}
.form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder {
color: #999;
}
A Possible Gotcha
Recommended Sanity Check - Make sure to add the form-control class to your inputs.
If you have bootstrap css loaded on your page, but your inputs don't have the
class="form-control" then placeholder CSS selector won't apply to them.
Example markup from the docs:
I know this didn't apply to the OP's markup but as I missed this at first and spent a little bit of effort trying to debug it, I'm posting this answer to help others.
I'm using Bootstrap 4 and Dennis Puzak's solution does not work for me.
The next solution works for me
.form-control::placeholder { color: white;} /* Chrome, Firefox, Opera*/
:-ms-input-placeholder.form-control { color: white; } /* Internet Explorer*/
.form-control::-ms-input-placeholder { color: white; } /* Microsoft Edge*/
Bootstrap has 3 lines of CSS, within your bootstrap.css generated file that control the placeholder text color:
.form-control::-moz-placeholder {
color: #999999;
opacity: 1;
}
.form-control:-ms-input-placeholder {
color: #999999;
}
.form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder {
color: #999999;
}
Now if you add this to your own CSS file it won't override bootstrap's because it is less specific. So assmuning your form inside a then add that to your CSS:
form .form-control::-moz-placeholder {
color: #fff;
opacity: 1;
}
form .form-control:-ms-input-placeholder {
color: #fff;
}
form .form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder {
color: #fff;
}
Voila that will override bootstrap's CSS.
The others did not work in my case (Bootstrap 4). Here is the solution I used.
html .form-control::-webkit-input-placeholder { color:white; }
html .form-control:-moz-placeholder { color:white; }
html .form-control::-moz-placeholder { color:white; }
html .form-control:-ms-input-placeholder { color:white; }
If we use a stronger selector (html first), we don't need to use the hacky value !important.
This overrides bootstraps CSS as we use a higher level of specificity to target .form-control elements (html first instead of .form-control first).
I think qwertzman is on the right track for the best solution to this.
If you only wanted to style a specific placeholder, then his answer still holds true.
But if you want to override the colour of all placeholders, (which is more probable) and if you are already compiling your own custom Bootstrap LESS, the answer is even simpler!
Override this LESS variable:
#input-color-placeholder
Boostrap Placeholder Mixin:
#mixin placeholder($color: $input-color-placeholder) {
// Firefox
&::-moz-placeholder {
color: $color;
opacity: 1; // Override Firefox's unusual default opacity; see https://github.com/twbs/bootstrap/pull/11526
}
&:-ms-input-placeholder { color: $color; } // Internet Explorer 10+
&::-webkit-input-placeholder { color: $color; } // Safari and Chrome
}
now call it:
#include placeholder($white);
You should check out this answer : Change an HTML5 input's placeholder color with CSS
Work on most browser, the solution in this thread is not working on FF 30+ for example
With LESS the actual mixin is in vendor-prefixes.less
.placeholder(#color: #input-color-placeholder) {
...
}
This mixin is called in forms.less on line 133:
.placeholder();
Your solution in LESS is:
.placeholder(#fff);
Imho the best way to go. Just use Winless or a composer compiler like Gulp/Grunt works, too and even better/faster.