Alternate <div> Visibility (mouseover image) - css

I'm having some trouble here. I want to show an image when mouse is hovered above following div.
HTML:
<div id="testmouseover">
<img src="testmouseover.png">
</div>
CSS:
#testmouseover
{
left: -9px;
top: -9px;
position: absolute;
width: 865px;
height: 653px;
z-index:1;
}
I have 4 of these divs wich should display a different image, so how can I add an ID to the hover?
Can someone help me with writing the CSS code for the hover? It will be greatly appreciated!

Have an onmouseover() event attached to the div. You can take some pointers from w3schools.
In the function that is being called at onmouseover, change the innerHTML property to have the desired image.
This can be achieved even quicker using jQuery:
$("#divId").click(function(){
$(this).html("Ur image html here")
});

I think it's easier than you think: try #testmouseover:hover
If that's not the right answer, please share a code sample on codepen

Here is an html version if it helps. The z-index is for layering images (stacking) not for mouse overs if I am correct.
<img src="NORMAL IMAGE" onmouseover="this.src='MOUSE OVER IMAGE'" onmouseout="this.src='Normal Image'" alt="ALTERNET TEXT">

Try this, pure CSS:
#testmouseover img {
display: none;
}
#testmouseover:hover img {
display: inline;
}
Be sure to give the div some width and height so that you don't get weird flickering stuff. For multiple divs just give them different IDs and copy this CSS a few times. If all the divs are the same you could also give them all the same class, or give them a class with the above mentioned CSS and an ID with the div specific styles.
Example: http://jsfiddle.net/S44MS/

Related

keep div open after hover without jquery

I actually use css function :hover to make my div appear and no jquery. The problem is that the div disappear when the cursor goes out of the div.
I'm also avoiding using display:block; function because i cannot take advantage of the opacity transition features of css. I saw other posts solving the question using all built jquery code. I wondered if it could be done without rewriting the entire code in jquery.
Here is the fiddle http://jsfiddle.net/dandecasa/k22UG/1/
As you see, when hovering the black div on the left, the #zobbigmenu div appears. Could it be possible to let it be visible when the cursor is in the #zobbigmenu div?
Thank you for you help
Javascript/jQuery is not necessary.
Add the styling on :hover of #zobbigmenu too.
jsFiddle example
#zobmenu:hover ~ #zobbigmenu, #zobbigmenu:hover {
margin-left: 20px;
cursor:alias;
opacity:0.8;
margin-right: auto;
z-index:10;
}
Alternatively, I would suggest nesting #zobbigmenu in #zobmenu.
You could wrap everything inside a <div>:
<div id="wrap">
<div id="zobmenu"></div>
<div id="zobbigmenu">
<a href="http://instagram.com/dandecasa" target="_blank">
<img src="http://theyellowhopeproject.com/iconmonstr-instagram-4-icon.png" height="50px"></img>
</a>
</div>
</div>
And change the CSS:
#wrap:hover #zobmenu ~#zobbigmenu {
margin-left: 20px ;
cursor:alias;
opacity:0.8;
margin-right: auto ;
z-index:10;
}
jsFiddle

html/css buttons that scroll down to different div sections on a webpage

Can someone help me I'm searching for css/html code example:
I have a webpage with 3 buttons(top, middle, bottom) each specified to 1 div section on my page, lets say my first div section is in the middle of that page div id='middle'.
If I click this button(middle) my page would automatically scroll down from the top
of my page to the div #middle section.
same for the other buttons refered to div id='top', and div id='bottom'
Thanks in forward! I really couldnt find any solution on the internet.
Is there a way to keep my buttonlist on a fixed position so it stays on screen while
moving through sections?
try this:
<input type="button" onClick="document.getElementById('middle').scrollIntoView();" />
For something really basic use this:
Go To Middle
Or for something simple in javascript check out this jQuery plugin ScrollTo. Quite useful for scrolling smoothly.
There is a much easier way to get the smooth scroll effect without javascript.
In your CSS just target the entire html tag and give it scroll-behavior: smooth;
html {
scroll-behavior: smooth;
}
a {
text-decoration: none;
color: black;
}
#down {
margin-top: 100%;
padding-bottom: 25%;
}
<html>
Click Here to Smoothly Scroll Down
<div id="down">
<h1>You are down!</h1>
</div>
</html
The "scroll-behavior" is telling the page how it should scroll and is so much easier than using javascript. Javascript will give you more options on speed and the smoothness but this will deliver without all of the confusing code.
HTML
Top
Middle
Bottom
<div id="top">Top</div>
<div id="middle">Middle</div>
<div id="bottom">Bottom</div>
CSS
#top,#middle,#bottom{
height: 600px;
width: 300px;
background: green;
}
Example http://jsfiddle.net/x4wDk/
Try this:
Scroll to top
If you want smooth scrolling:
html {
scroll-behavior: smooth;
}

Position image into background

I'm working on a website for a girlfriend of mine.
But I'm stuck positioning a the logo.
Here is the website I'm talking about:
http://xntriek-test.s3-website-eu-west-1.amazonaws.com/
I tried using z-indexes but don't work. I also tried setting an background image for the body.
But then I'm to limited with sizing the image.
I'm using Twitter bootstrap to put this thing together.
At the moment this is the class I'm using for the logo:
.logo{
position: absolute;
top: 25px;
left: 25px;
height: 45%;
width: 30%;
z-index: 1;
}
At the moment I'm positioning the image in a span along side the main content.
But because I'm using position: absolute this wouldn't make a difference were I put it.
If any body has any ideas how I could solve this, maybe a different approach then I'm doing right now. Any help welcome!
You need to modify your CSS along the following:
<div class="span6 offset3" style="position: relative; z-index: 1">
z-index affects positioned elements, so just add position: relative to your span of interest.
I would create a special class "z-wrap" and modify the style sheet.
<div class="span6 offset3 z-wrap">
In CSS style sheet:
.z-wrap {position: relative; z-index: 1}
Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/CSS/Understanding_z-index/Adding_z-index
Note You may have to adjust the value of z-index depending on any z-index value you may have set in the logo container.
First you are distorting the logo with your css, if you want your image to be responsive position it in an responsive element, position this absolut and let the image adjust it's size.
#logoContainer {
position:absolute;
top:25px;
left:25px;
width:30%;
z-index:-1;
}
img.logo{
width:100%;
height:auto;
}
your html should look something like this:
<div id="logoContainer">
<img src="yoursrc/logo.gif" alt="The Logo" class="logo" />
</div>
Put this right after the opening of your body tag and not in some other elements.
By putting it in other elements the logo inherits their z-index and you can only influence it's z-positioning inside the parent but not on the overall page.
One thing to remember when using the z-index attribute :
Only the elements placed using their "position" attribute (relative, absolute or fixed), can be affected by the "z-index".
So if you want to fix your issue, either put your logo as a background image, either use position in the CSS of the content.

XHTML anchor link with background image and no text

Is it possible to have anchor links no text inside that has a background image and fixed dimensions and still be good for SEO?
Example CSS:
a{display:block;width:50px;height:20px;background-image:url('images/background.jpg');background-repeat:no-repeat;background-position:0 0;}
a:hover img{background-position:0 -20px;}
Example HTML:
If the image has text in it or you simply want to add its description, one thing you can do to help SEO and accessibility is to give the anchor a title and content with a large negative text-indent, like adding this to your a CSS:
display:block;
text-indent:-9999em;
...with the following HTML:
IMAGE TEXT
Inspired by neXib's comment on another answer.
HTML:
<a href="/home" title="Homepage" class="home">
<div><img src="/images/sprite.png" alt="Home" /></div>
</a>
CSS:
a {
display: block;
}
.home div {
width: 84px;
height: 27px;
overflow: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.home div img {
position: absolute;
top: -65px;
left: -20px;
}
So long as the div has 'overflow: hidden' and fixed dimensions the image inside can be positioned within to only display the part of the sprite you want.
SEO was a concern for me too and I think this solution will work fine.
The search engine can't read it, so how would it be good for SEO? More importantly, why do you want to do this, what are you trying to do?
Use alt and title attribute, but having no content inside the tags is pointless.I think that there is a serious risk that you will be penalized in the search results!
Again, why are you trying this. Are you doing buttons that are linking to another page or that
run a javascript function?
Wouldnt this fix the problem?
Well this is a bit old question but just want opinion on this!

Make a div into a link

I have a <div> block with some fancy visual content that I don't want to change. I want to make it a clickable link.
I'm looking for something like <div> … </div>, but that is valid XHTML 1.1.
Came here in the hope of finding a better solution that mine, but I don't like any of the ones on offer here. I think some of you have misunderstood the question. The OP wants to make a div full of content behave like a link. One example of this would be facebook ads - if you look, they're actually proper markup.
For me the no-nos are: javascript (shouldn't be needed just for a link, and very bad SEO/accessibility); invalid HTML.
In essence it's this:
Build your panel using normal CSS techniques and valid HTML.
Somewhere in there put a link that you want to be the default link if the user clicks on the panel (you can have other links too).
Inside that link, put an empty span tag (<span></span>, not <span /> - thanks #Campey)
give the panel position:relative
apply the following CSS to the empty span:
{
position:absolute;
width:100%;
height:100%;
top:0;
left: 0;
z-index: 1;
/* fixes overlap error in IE7/8,
make sure you have an empty gif */
background-image: url('empty.gif');
}
It will now cover the panel, and as it's inside an <A> tag, it's a clickable link
give any other links inside the panel position:relative and a suitable z-index (>1) to bring them in front of the default span link
You can't make the div a link itself, but you can make an <a> tag act as a block, the same behaviour a <div> has.
a {
display: block;
}
You can then set the width and height on it.
This is an ancient question, but I thought I'd answer it since everyone here has some crazy solutions. It's actually very very simple...
An anchor tag works like this -
EVERYTHING IN HERE TURNS INTO A LINK
Sooo...
<div id="thediv" />
Although I'm not sure if this is valid. If that's the reasoning behind spoken solutions, then I apologise...
Requires a little javascript.
But, your div would be clickable.
<div onclick="location.href='http://www.example.com';" style="cursor:pointer;"></div>
This option doesn’t require an empty.gif as in the most upvoted answer:
HTML:
<div class="feature">
</div>
CSS:
div.feature {
position: relative;
}
div.feature a {
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
top: 0;
left: 0;
text-decoration: none; /* No underlines on the link */
z-index: 10; /* Places the link above everything else in the div */
background-color: #FFF; /* Fix to make div clickable in IE */
opacity: 0; /* Fix to make div clickable in IE */
filter: alpha(opacity=1); /* Fix to make div clickable in IE */
}
As proposed at http://www.digitalskydesign.com/how-to-make-an-entire-div-a-link-using-css/
This is a "valid" solution to achieving what you want.
<style type="text/css">
.myspan {
display: block;
}
</style>
<span class="myspan">text</span>
But most-likely what you really want is to have an <a> tag displayed as a block level element.
I would not advise using JavaScript to simulate a hyperlink as that defeats the purpose of markup validation, which is ultimately to promote accessibility (publishing well-formed documents following proper semantic rules minimizes the possibility the same document will be interpreted differently by different browsers).
It would be preferable to publish a web page that does not validate, but renders and functions properly on all browsers, including ones with JavaScript disabled. Furthermore, using onclick does not provide the semantic information for a screen reader to determine that the div is functioning as a link.
The cleanest way would be to use jQuery with the data-tags introduced in HTML. With this solution you can create a link on every tag you want. First define the tag (e.g. div) with a data-link tag:
<div data-link="http://www.google.at/">Some content in the div which is arbitrary</div>
Now you can style the div however you want. And you have to create also the style for the "link"-alike behavior:
[data-link] {
cursor: pointer;
}
And at last put this jQuery call to the page:
$(document).ready(function() {
$("[data-link]").click(function() {
window.location.href = $(this).attr("data-link");
return false;
});
});
With this code jQuery applys a click listener to every tag on the page which has a "data-link" attribute and redirects to the URL which is in the data-link attribute.
Not sure if this is valid but it worked for me.
The code :
<div style='position:relative;background-color:#000000;width:600px;height:30px;border:solid;'>
<p style='display:inline;color:#ffffff;float:left;'> Whatever </p>
<a style='position:absolute;top:0px;left:0px;width:100%;height:100%;display:inline;' href ='#'></a>
</div>
To make thepeer's answer work in IE 7 and forward, it needs a few tweaks.
IE will not honour z-index if the element is has no background-color, so the link will not overlap parts of the containig div that has content, only the blank parts. To fix this a background is added with opacity 0.
For some reason IE7 and various compatibility modes completely fail when using the span in a link approach. However if the link itself is given the style it works just fine.
.blockLink
{
position:absolute;
top:0;
left: 0;
width:100%;
height:100%;
z-index: 1;
background-color:#ffffff;
-ms-filter:"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Alpha(Opacity=0)";
filter: alpha(opacity=0);
opacity:0;
}
<div style="position:relative">
<some content>
<a href="somepage" class="blockLink" />
<div>
you could also try by wrapping an anchor, then turning its height and width to be the same with its parent. This works for me perfectly.
<div id="css_ID">
</div>
An option that hasn't been mentioned is using flex. By applying flex: 1 to the a tag, it expands to fit the container.
div {
height: 100px;
width: 100px;
display: flex;
border: 1px solid;
}
a {
flex: 1;
}
<div>
Link
</div>
This worked for me:
HTML:
<div>
WHATEVER YOU WANT
<a href="YOUR LINK HERE">
<span class="span-link"></span>
</a>
</div>
CSS:
.span-link {
position:absolute;
width:100%;
height:100%;
top:0;
left: 0;
z-index: 9999;
}
This adds an invisible element (the span), which covers your entire div, and is above your whole div on the z-index, so when someone clicks on that div, the click is essentially intercepted by your invisible "span" layer, which is linked.
Note: If you're already using z-indexes for other elements, just make sure the value of this z-index is higher than anything you want it to rest "on top" of.
why not? use <div></div> works fine in HTML5
This example worked for me:
<div style="position: relative; width:191px; height:83px;">
</div>
This post is Old I know but I just had to fix the same issue because simply writing a normal link tag with the display set to block does not make the whole div clickable in IE. so to fix this issue far simpler than having to use JQuery.
Firstly let us understand why this happens: IE wont make an empty div clickable it only make the text/image within that div/a tag clickable.
Solution: Fill the div with a bakground image and hide it from the viewer.
How?
You ask good questions, now listen up.
add this backround style to the a tag
> "background:url('some_small_image_path')
> -2000px -2000px no-repeat;"
And there you have it the whole div is now clickable. This was the best way for me cause Im using it for my Photo Gallery to let the user clik on one half of the image to move left/right and then place a small image as well just for visual effects. so for me I used the left and right images as background images anyway!
Just have the link in the block and enhance it with jquery. It degrades 100% gracefully for anyone without javascript. Doing this with html isn't really the best solution imho.
For example:
<div id="div_link">
<h2>The Link and Headline</h2>
<p>Some more stuff and maybe another link.</p>
</div>
Then use jquery to make the block clickable (via web designer wall):
$(document).ready(function(){
$("#div_link").click(function(){
window.location=$(this).find("a").attr("href"); return false;
});
});
Then all you have to do is add cursor styles to the div
#div_link:hover {cursor: pointer;}
For bonus points only apply these styles if javascript is enabled by adding a 'js_enabled' class to the div, or the body, or whatever.
This is the best way to do it as used on the BBC website and the Guardian:
I found the technique here:
http://codepen.io/IschaGast/pen/Qjxpxo
heres the html
<div class="highlight block-link">
<h2>I am an example header</h2>
<p>This entire box links somewhere, thanks to faux block links. I am some example text with a custom link that sits within the block</p>
</div>
heres the CSS
/**
* Block Link
*
* A Faux block-level link. Used for when you need a block-level link with
* clickable areas within it as directly nesting a tags breaks things.
*/
.block-link {
position: relative;
}
.block-link a {
position: relative;
z-index: 1;
}
.block-link .block-link__overlay-link {
position: static;
&:before {
bottom: 0;
content: "";
left: 0;
overflow: hidden;
position: absolute;
right: 0;
top: 0;
white-space: nowrap;
z-index: 0;
}
&:hover,
&:focus {
&:before {
background: rgba(255,255,0, .2);
}
}
}
<div> … </div>
Actually you need to include the JavaScript code at the moment,
check this tutorial to do so.
but there is a tricky way to achieve this using a CSS code
you must nest an anchor tag inside your div tag and you must apply this property to it,
display:block;
when you've done that,it will make the whole width area clickable (but within the height of the anchor tag),if you want to cover the whole div area you must set the height of the anchor tag exactly to the height of the div tag,for example:
height:60px;
this is gonna make the whole area clickable,then you can apply text-indent:-9999px to anchor tag to achieve the goal.
this is really tricky and simple and it's just created using CSS code.
here is an example: http://jsfiddle.net/hbirjand/RG8wW/
This work for me:
<div onclick="location.href='page.html';" style="cursor:pointer;">...</div>
You can give a link to your div by following method:
<div class="boxdiv" onClick="window.location.href='https://www.google.co.in/'">google</div>
<style type="text/css">
.boxdiv {
cursor:pointer;
width:200px;
height:200px;
background-color:#FF0000;
color:#fff;
text-align:center;
font:13px/17px Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
}
</style>
You can make surround the element with a href tags or you can use jquery and use
$('').click(function(e){
e.preventDefault();
//DO SOMETHING
});
This is the simplest way.
Say, this is the div block I want to make clickable:
<div class="inner_headL"></div>
So put a href as follows:
<a href="#">
<div class="inner_headL"></div>
</a>
Just consider the div block as a normal html element and enable the usual a href tag.
It works on FF at least.
I pulled in a variable because some values in my link will change depending on what record the user is coming from.
This worked for testing :
<div onclick="location.href='page.html';" style="cursor:pointer;">...</div>
and this works too :
<div onclick="location.href='<%=Webpage%>';" style="cursor:pointer;">...</div>
While I don't recommend doing this under any circumstance, here is some code that makes a DIV into a link (note: this example uses jQuery and certain markup is removed for simplicity):
<script type="text/javascript" src="jquery-1.3.2.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(document).ready(function() {
$("div[href]").click(function () {
window.location = $(this).attr("href");
});
});
</script>
<div href="http://www.google.com">
My Div Link
</div>
If you can use bootstrap, one simple solution is to use bootstrap .stretched-link.
https://getbootstrap.com/docs/4.3/utilities/stretched-link/
Sample Code
<div class="card" style="width: 18rem;">
<img src="..." class="card-img-top" alt="...">
<div class="card-body">
<h5 class="card-title">Card with stretched link</h5>
<p class="card-text">Some quick example text to build on the card title and make up the bulk of the card's content.</p>
Go somewhere
</div>
</div>
Soviut's answer was not sufficient for me. I had to use
a { display: inline-flex; }
to remove baseline artifacts, when using just a img in the a.
Enclosing your div inside an anchor tag <a href></a> works like charm:
<a href="">
<div>anything goes here will turn into a link</div>
</a>
My smarty pants answer:
"Evasive answer to: "How to make block level element a hyperlink and validate in XHTML 1.1"
Just use HTML5 DOCTYPE DTD."
Didn't actually hold true for ie7
onclick="location.href='page.html';"
Works IE7-9, Chrome, Safari, Firefox,
if just everything could be this simple...
#logo {background:url(../global_images/csg-4b15a4b83d966.png) no-repeat top left;background-position:0 -825px;float:left;height:48px;position:relative;width:112px}
#logo a {padding-top:48px; display:block;}
<div id="logo"></div>
just think a little outside the box ;-)

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