The Fast Refresh / Hot Reloading in Next.js comes with a small triangle animation in the lower right corner by default:
Is there any way to customise this? I'd like the whole page to turn grey or similar so I get a visual feedback that my file change is actually taking effect and that I didn't happen to change the wrong file or something,.
A very ugly workaround until someone with better next.js knowledge helps out:
// Put this in your _app.js file
if (global.window) {
global.addEventListener('load', (event) => {
const watcher = window.document.getElementById('__next-build-watcher')
if (watcher) {
const newStyle = global.document.createElement('style')
newStyle.innerHTML = '#icon-wrapper { width: 100vw!important; height: 100vh!important; opacity: 0.3!important; } #container { background: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3)!important; }'
watcher.shadowRoot.appendChild(newStyle)
}
});
}
Makes that triangle icon 100vw 100vh and semi-transparent instead of 16px 16px .
I obviously have a lot to learn about CSS!
I'm using VS2015 and Cordova to develop a mobile application. I'm using ngMap (http://ngmap.github.io/) to wrap Google maps. I really like the library! The problem is that it defaults the size of 300px, and my CSS skills are too poor to correctly override that.
I know that ngMap defaults to 300px, and that you can specify default-style="false" and then provide overrides in CSS that specify position: absolute; height:100%; width:100% - which should make the map fill the page.
When I try to do that, I end up with this:
When I accept the default behavior, I have a working map, but it's only 300px tall:
Here's a Plunker that's simple, but demonstrates the issue I'm experiencing:
http://plnkr.co/edit/8qfGaLBMgXFtluELZhCs?p=preview
Note that the CSS has the recommended overrides. When those are omitted, the map is visible - but only 300px tall. I know this should not be so hard, and I know others have had success following the instructions listed above. I just can't get it to work.
For what it's worth, the behavior is the same when I deploy it to my Samsung S5: I see the lower left-hand corner of the map. Any help appreciated!!
Adding some CSS and triggering "resize" event you can achieve your goal:
CSS:
body, html {
height:100%;
width:100%;
}
.map {
position:absolute;
height:100%;
width:100%;
}
.scroll {
height: 100%;
}
JS:
NgMap.getMap({ id: "splashSearch" }).then(function (map) {
vm.map = map;
$timeout(function() {
google.maps.event.trigger(map,'resize');
}, 200);
});
Forked your plunker: http://plnkr.co/edit/7dVCO8FpWxmLVVSMtqjH?p=preview
My website - www.forex-central.net - has the Google Translate drop-down widget on the top right of every page.
Only problem is it's a bit too wide for my website (5 cm), I would need a 4 cm version (which I've seen on other sites so I know this is possible)...but I have no idea how to tweak the code.
The code Google supplies for the widget I use is:
<script type="text/javascript">function googleTranslateElementInit() { new google.translate.TranslateElement({ pageLanguage: 'en', gaTrack: true, layout: google.translate.TranslateElement.InlineLayout.SIMPLE }, 'google_translate_element');}</script><script type="text/javascript" src="//translate.google.com/translate_a/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit"></script>
Any help would be greatly appreciated! I'm a bit of a novice and have searched for hours on this, not getting anywhere :-/
Something like this will get you started:
.goog-te-menu-frame {
max-width:100% !important; //or whatever width you want
}
However, you would also need to do something like:
.goog-te-menu2 { //the element that contains the table of options
max-width: 100% !important;
overflow: scroll !important;
box-sizing:border-box !important; //fixes a padding issue
height:auto !important; //gets rid of vertical scroll caused by box-sizing
}
But that second part can't actually be done because the translate interface is included in your page as an iframe. Fortunately, it doesn't have its own domain, so we can access it via Javascript like this:
$('.goog-te-menu-frame').contents().find('.goog-te-menu2').css(
{
'max-width':'100%',
'overflow':'scroll',
'box-sizing':'border-box',
'height':'auto'
}
)
But that won't work until the element actually exists (it's being loaded asynchronously) so we have to wrap that in something that I got here. Put it all together, you get this:
function changeGoogleStyles() {
if($('.goog-te-menu-frame').contents().find('.goog-te-menu2').length) {
$('.goog-te-menu-frame').contents().find('.goog-te-menu2').css(
{
'max-width':'100%',
'overflow':'scroll',
'box-sizing':'border-box',
'height':'auto'
}
)
} else {
setTimeout(changeGoogleStyles, 50);
}
}
changeGoogleStyles();
Whew.
You can use that same strategy to apply other styles to the translate box or perhaps alter the table styles to have it flow vertically instead of scroll horizontally offscreen, whatever. See this answer.
EDIT:
Even this doesn't work, because Google re-applies the styles every time you click the dropdown. In this case, we try and change height and box-sizing, but Google reapplies over those, while overflow and max-width stick. What we need is to put our styles somewhere they won't get overriden and add !importants [cringes]. Inline styles will do the trick (I also replaced our selector with a variable for succinctness and what is likely a negligible performance boost):
function changeGoogleStyles() {
if(($goog = $('.goog-te-menu-frame').contents().find('body')).length) {
var stylesHtml = '<style>'+
'.goog-te-menu2 {'+
'max-width:100% !important;'+
'overflow:scroll !important;'+
'box-sizing:border-box !important;'+
'height:auto !important;'+
'}'+
'</style>';
$goog.prepend(stylesHtml);
} else {
setTimeout(changeGoogleStyles, 50);
}
}
changeGoogleStyles();
The Google Translate widget creates an iframe with content from another domain (several files from Google servers). We would have to manipulate the content inside the iframe, but this so-called cross-site scripting did not work for me. I found another solution. I downloaded two of the many files which the widget uses, so I could edit them.
Bear in mind that Google can change its API anytime. The hack will have to be adapted then.
Prerequisite:
I assume that the widget is working on your website. You just want to fit it on smaller screens. My initial code looks like:
<div id="google_translate_element"></div>
<script type="text/javascript">
function googleTranslateElementInit()
{
new google.translate.TranslateElement({pageLanguage:'de', layout: google.translate.TranslateElement.InlineLayout.SIMPLE}, 'google_translate_element');
}
</script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="//translate.google.com/translate_a/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit"></script>
If your initial code looks different, you might have to adapt your solution accordingly.
Special tools used:
Chrome DevTools (adapt for other browsers)
Procedure:
In Google Chrome, right-click on your page containing the Google Translate widget.
Click Inspect. A window or side pane will apper with lots of HTML info.
In the top line, select the Sources tab.
Browse the sources tree to
/top/translate.google.com/translate_a/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit
Click the file in the tree. The file content will be shown.
Under the code window of element.js, there is a little button with two curly brackets { }. Click this. It will sort the code for better readability. We will need this readability in the next steps.
Right-click inside the element.js code > Save as…. Save the file inside the files hierarchy of your website, in my case:
/framework/google-translate-widget/element.js
Point your <script> tag to the local element.js.
<!--<script type="text/javascript" src="//translate.google.com/translate_a/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit"></script>-->
<script type="text/javascript" src="../framework/google-translate-widget/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit"></script>
From now on, your website should load element.js from its local directory. Now is a good moment to check if your Google Translate widget still works. Also check in Chrome DevTools where the browser has taken the file from (Google server or local directory). It should sit in the sources tree under
/top/[your domain or IP]/framework/google-translate-widget/element.js?cb=googleTranslateElementInit
We need another file from Google servers. Browse the sources tree to
/top/translate.googleapis.com/translate_static/css/translateelement.css
Download this file after clicking the curly brackets { }. I saved it in my website files directory as
/framework/google-translate-widget/translateelement.css
In your website files directory, open element.js and change line 66:
//c._ps = b + '/translate_static/css/translateelement.css';
c._ps = '/framework/google-translate-widget/translateelement.css';
From now on, your website will also load translateelement.css from its local directory. Check this now.
Open your local translateeleent.css and append the following styles at the end:
/* Make all languages visible on small screens. */
.goog-te-menu2 {
width: 300px!important;
height: 300px!important;
overflow: auto!important;
}
.goog-te-menu2 table,
.goog-te-menu2 table tbody,
.goog-te-menu2 table tbody tr {
width: 100%!important;
height: 100%!important;
}
.goog-te-menu2 table tbody tr td {
width: 100%!important;
display: block!important;
}
.goog-te-menu2 table tbody tr td .goog-te-menu2-colpad {
visibility: none!important;
}
I borrowed the code from another answer: Google translate widget mobile overflow
The geometry might work now, but we broke another thing. The widget text showing “Select Language”, “Sélectionner une langue”, or whatever it says in you language, is locked to that language now. Since you want your other-language readers to understand the offer, the widget should adapt to their language as it used to work before our hack. Also, the listed languages’ names are affected. The reason for this bug can be found in the file element.js, which was silently tailored to our browser’s language setting. Look in element.js on lines 51 and 69
c._cl = 'fr';
_loadJs(b + '/translate_static/js/element/main_fr.js');
In my case, it was set to French (fr).
Correcting line 51 is as simple as
c._cl = 'auto'; //'fr';
Line 61 is trickier, because there is no 'auto' value available. There is a file main.js (without the _fr ending) available on Google servers, which provides English as a fallback, but we prefer the user’s language. Have a look in the file
/top/translate.googleapis.com/translate_a/l?client=…
It contains two objects. sl and tl meaning the source languages and target languages supported for translation. We have to check if the user’s browser is set to one of the target languages. There is a JavaScript constant navigator.language for this.
Edit element.js at line 69:
// determine browser language to display Google Translate widget in that language
var nl = navigator.language;
var tl = ["af","sq","am","ar","hy","az","eu","bn","my","bs","bg","ceb","ny",
"zh-TW","zh-CN","da","de","en","eo","et","tl","fi","fr","fy","gl",
"ka","el","gu","ht","ha","haw","iw","hi","hmn","ig","id","ga","is",
"it","ja","jw","yi","kn","kk","ca","km","rw","ky","ko","co","hr",
"ku","lo","la","lv","lt","lb","mg","ml","ms","mt","mi","mr","mk",
"mn","ne","nl","no","or","ps","fa","pl","pt","pa","ro","ru","sm",
"gd","sv","sr","st","sn","sd","si","sk","sl","so","es","sw","su",
"tg","ta","tt","te","th","cs","tr","tk","ug","uk","hu","ur","uz",
"vi","cy","be","xh","yo","zu"];
var gl = "";
if( tl.includes( nl )) gl = '_'+nl;
else
{
nl = nl.substring(0, 3);
if( tl.includes( nl)) gl = '_'+nl;
else
{
nl = nl.substring(0, 2);
if( tl.includes( nl)) gl = '_'+nl;
else gl = '';
}
}
_loadJs(b + '/translate_static/js/element/main'+gl+'.js');
//_loadJs(b + '/translate_static/js/element/main_fr.js');
… should do the trick.
Try using this in your CSS
.pac-container, .pac-item { width: 100px !important;}
where you can alter the with of the dropdown by altering 'the 100px' value.
This should work. Let me know if it doesn't and I'll have another look.
Hi I want to do a fixed size page, but don't want the page to break or reflow at all if the user resizes the window. Is this a javascript function?
sample: http://www.neimanmarcus.com/
Most people put all the content of there page inside a div with an id, such as 'doc', then they would apply the following rule:
<body><div id="doc">
YOUR PAGE HERE
</div></body>
body {
test-align: center;
}
#doc {
margin: 0 auto;
text-align: left;
width: 940px
}
The "text-align" fixes an IE 6 issue, really you just need to assign a margin to your wrapping document div.
it doesn't need java script function .
but remember : don't use % for declaring width or height for elements in css.(for having a static element that resizing window doesn't effect that).
for example : "width:90%;" ==> replace this with "width:100px;"
I am trying to change the body background color when the user changes the theme of the page using the jQuery UI Themeselector.
I have tried this
function updateBodyBackground() {
$("body").css('background-color', $('.ui-widget-header:first").css("background-color") + ' !important;');
}
Then I call it on document ready (to set initial theme background) and I set it to the onClose event for the ThemeSelector like this;
$function() {
updateBodyBackground();
$('#switcher').themeswitcher({ expires: 365, path: '/', loadTheme: "sunny", onClose: updateBodyBackground });
}
Doesn't do anything in Firefox, seems to be behind one on change in Chrome and the selector doesn't seem to work at all in IE8.
Any suggestions on how to change the background to better match the selected jQuery UI Theme?
Thanks!
A better way is not to use a timer, just use one of the jQueryUI CSS classes with the background colour your looking for, in my case I like the background colour chosen by: ui-state-hover :
<div id= "main_background" class= "ui-state-hover">
// Your Content
</div>
Since the id over-rides all class settings, use your id to remove or change any undesirable settings that ui-state-hover uses, such as the background-image :
#main_background {
position: relative;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
width: 800px;
height: 742px;
margin: 0px;
border: 0px;
padding: 5px;
background-image:none; // kills the background url (image) that ui-state-hover sets
}
Buggy fix using timeout...
find function updateCSS() inside themeswitchertool.js
After
$("head").append(cssLink);
Add the below line increase timeout if it still doesn't work...
Insert
setTimeout("$('body').css('background-color', $('.ui-widget-header:first').css('background-color'))", 2000);
You had an error in your js (used a " instead of ' ):
$('.ui-widget-header:first")
Should be:
$('.ui-widget-header:first')
But I found that this works. No need to put into Themeswitchertool.js, dropped the setTimeout to 500 so it changes more quickly.
function updateBodyBackground() {setTimeout("$('body').css('background-color', $('.ui-widget-header:first').css('background-color'))", 500);
}
$('#switcher').themeswitcher({ expires: 365, path: '/', loadTheme: "sunny", onClose: updateBodyBackground });