On a responsive page, I need to add a white container as shown on image below: the white container is on top of the slider, but doesn't go further right to the right edge of the "container" class.
It's hard to explain but hopefully with the image and Fiddle below, my problem should be understandable.
How to place this white container so that it remains always in this location, against the right edge of class "container", and against the bottom of the slider, even when reducing window size?
See Fiddle
Markup:
<div id="div1">
<div class="container">
content
<br />content
<br />content
</div>
</div>
<div id="slider">
<img src="http://lorempixel.com/1000/300/sports/" />
</div>
CSS:
.container {
max-width: 600px;
margin: 0 auto;
background: rgba(0,0,0,0.2)
}
#div1 {
background: yellow;
}
Related
How to size/wrap a div container around an image inside It? Where float: right and margin-left: auto are potentially causing issues.
I'm struggling to get a div to be sized by wrapping properly around the image inside it. Please have a look at the example I'm referring to here:
Link to Example
(Might be worth playing around with the window size to help explain my problem)
I'm practicing with Bootstrap for the first time. The red blocks on each side are grid blocks 1 and 12, with the blue, and green sections filling the remaining 10. The big orange rectangles are responsive images that I want to be kept central spaced 20px apart at all times.
Using Chrome's "Inspect Element" (or similar) - If you inspect the orange rectangle on the right hand side, and have a look at the container div (class="container-img-r") - This div is wrapping around the orange image exactly how I wanted (albeit including the invisible border). But I'm not having much luck achieving the same result with the div container for the orange image on the left side (it still fills the blue parent element)
I've played around with different options for float/margins/position but can't seem to crack it.
Here's the CSS I have for the relevent content:
.container-img-l {
/* float:right; ??? Nothing I tried here seemed to make a difference */
}
.container-img-r {
float:left;
}
.item-pos-l {
margin-left:auto;
border-right:10px solid transparent; /* Margins just collapsed when resizing window */
height:323px;
width:510px;
}
.item-pos-r {
float:left;
border-left:10px solid transparent;
height:323px;
width:510px;
}
The reason for me wanting the div to accurately wrap around the responsive images is that I want to overlay some more CSS content over the images, scaling/re-positioning automatically as the window/device size changes (Click here and you'll clearly see where I'm hoping to implement this responsive style).
Maybe there are clashes with the Bootstrap CSS at play but I'm out of ideas.
Your first link doesn't remotely look like the html you want to make responsive. It would be best to learn responsive and fluid (no pixels heights or widths if possible) css before attempting to modify a framework you are unfamiliar with. Also, you have an error in your html - validate it to make sure you've closed all your elements. Also indent and comment all your code and avoid the use of inline styles.
Demo: http://jsbin.com/wazanu/2/
http://jsbin.com/wazanu/2/edit -- edit link
CSS:
body {background:#eee}
.header {padding:20px;}
.portfolio-grid .col-sm-6 {
margin-bottom: 30px
}
.img-wrapper .title {
text-align:center;
}
#media (min-width:768px) {
.img-wrapper {
position: relative;
overflow: hidden;
}
.img-wrapper img {width:100%;}
.img-wrapper .title {
position: absolute;
text-align:left;
bottom: -90px;
padding: 0 20px 20px 20px;
height: 150px;
background: red;
transition: all .5s ease-in-out;
}
.img-wrapper .title h3 {
margin: 0;
height: 60px;
line-height: 60px;
}
.img-wrapper:hover .title {
bottom: 0
}
}
HTML:
<header class="header text-center">
My header
</header>
<div class="container">
<div class="row portfolio-grid">
<div class="col-sm-6">
<div class="img-wrapper">
<img src="http://placekitten.com/g/400/300" class="img-responsive center-block" alt="">
<div class="title">
<h3>Title of Project</h3>
<p>Content about project goes here</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
<!--/.col-sm-6 -->
<div class="col-sm-6">
<div class="img-wrapper">
<img src="http://placebear.com/g/400/300" class="img-responsive center-block" alt="">
</div>
</div>
<!--/.col-sm-6 -->
<div class="clearfix visible-sm"></div>
<div class="col-sm-6">
<div class="img-wrapper">
<img src="http://placekitten.com/g/400/300" class="img-responsive center-block" alt="">
</div>
</div>
<!--/.col-sm-6 -->
<div class="col-sm-6">
<div class="img-wrapper">
<img src="http://placekitten.com/g/400/300" class="img-responsive center-block" alt="">
</div>
</div>
<!--/.col-sm-6 -->
</div>
<!--/.row-->
</div>
<!--/.container-->
I warned you, I can be a little vague
Anyway, what I am after are those pages that fill the whole screen, but if you scroll down and you come to a different section ( some specific content or just a footer), it breaks away from the previous content by having a different background.
Sorry, if I sleep on it, I can maybe come up whith a better explanation and/or an example page.
Does that style have a name and how is it done? If it needs to be responsive?
thanks
Yes. It's simple to do. Setup like so, and customize to your heart's content.
<div id="header" class="container">
<div class="wrapper">
[...]
</div>
</div>
<div id="feature_area" class="container">
<div class="wrapper">
[...]
</div>
</div>
<div id="content" class="container">
<div class="wrapper">
[...]
</div>
</div>
<div id="footer" class="container">
<div class="wrapper">
[...]
</div>
</div>
CSS:
.container {
width: 100%;
text-align: center;
}
.wrapper {
margin: 0px auto;
width: 70%;
text-align: left;
}
The parent (container) <div>s will stretch to 100% page width. The child (wrapper) <div>s will stretch to 70% of their parents (or, you can set this to fixed pixel dimensions and change based upon screen dimensions) and will be centered. You apply decorative backgrounds to the parent .container like:
#header {
background: #ff0000;
}
#footer {
background: #000;
}
#content {
background: url(img/bg_pattern.gif);
}
#feature_area {
background: url(img/hero_feature_img.jpg) top center no-repeat;
}
I'm having an issue aligning three divs inside a parent div, the effect I need is the following
|IMAGE| +TEXT+ |IMAGE|
Each div contains an Image (2) and the text (1) respectively. Aligning them is easy, the problem is that I want the CENTER div to auto width to the size of the browsers' window and keep the other IMAGE divs always on the right and left side respectively.
Something like this for example, if the user maximizes the window:
|IMAGE| +++++++++++++++++++TEXT++++++++++++++++++++++++ |IMAGE|
As you can see, the idea is that the center div grows, and auto width but keeping the structure.
How could I get that behaviour? Thanks in advance.
#container { text-align: center; }
#div-1 { float: left; }
#div-2 { display: inline; }
#div-3 { float: right; }
If that still doesn't behave how you want, please give more detailed requirements.
Here is another inline implementation for three images side by side:
<div style="text-align:center">
<div style="float: left"><img src="image1.png"/></div>
<div style="display: inline"><img src="image2.png"/></div>
<div style="float: right"><img src="image3.png"/></div>
</div>
This works rather well as well.
.container{width: 100%; padding: 5px;}
.fig-left {float: left;}
.text {float: left;}
.fig-right{float: right;}
/* add margins maybe */
.text, .fig-right, p{margin: .75em;}
and HTML https://codepen.io/tradesouthwest/pen/MWELwGN to test
<div class="container">
<div class="fig-left">
<img src="https://picsum.photos/id/1055/200/300"/>
</div>
<div class="text">
<p>ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOP don't forget the alt in images QRSTUVWXYZ</p>
</div>
<div class="fig-right">
<img src="https://picsum.photos/id/1055/200/300"/>
</div>
</div>
I have a two column layout, using a container and a div called "left" and a div called "Right". How do I make sure that the div#right is only 500px, but div#left is as big as the user's browser will allow ...?
Here's what I have now:
<div id="container">
<div id="left" style="float:left"> </div>
<div id="right" style="float: right; width: 500px"> </div>
</div>
Don't float the left div to the left. If you leave it "unfloated", then it will be the main content and automatically fill the available space.
You can do it by unfloating the #left div and giving it a padding-left that equals the #right div's width (this makes room for the right div). Finally, you'd need to swap the source order of both div's.
<div id="container">
<div id="right" style="float: right; width: 100px; "> </div>
<div id="left" style="padding-right: 100px; "> </div>
</div>
You can see it in action here.
Change style of you left div to:
<div id="left" style="margin-right:500px"></div>
This will make sure that content won't flow under the right floating div when content in the left one takes more vertical space than content in the right one.
Important
Don't forget to put the floated div in front of the unfloated one. So put your right one first in the markup and then the left one.
Solution to your particular problem
So you have two div elements
<div id="endants-content">
<div id="screenshot-preview">...</div>
<div id="endants-main-content">...</div>
</div>
And CSS should be like this to make it work as expected:
div#endants-content
{
/* put min-width here is you need it */
}
div#screenshot-preview
{
float:right;
width:30%;
}
div#endants-main-content
{
margin-right:30%;
overflow:auto;
}
uparrow.gif and downarrow.gif
So, it would look like so:
How can I create 3 divs and style them with CSS so those arrows are positions with the top arrow above the bottom arrow?
<div class="vote">
<div class="uparrow" />
<div class="downarrow" />
</div>
Should I create a "vote" div with restricted width? Would I float: top and float: bottom the two arrow divs with the background set as my two images? I plan on having content directly to the right of the vote arrows so it needs to be restricted and tight.
Don't use divs for an image - there's already a perfectly good img tag!
<div class="vote">
<img alt="^" title="vote up" src="/images/up.arrow.png" />
<img alt="v" title="vote down" src="/images/down.arrow.png" />
</div>
And then simply:
.vote
{
width: 15px;
float: left; clear: left;
}
.vote img
{
display: block;
float: none; clear: both;
}
You may want to add some margin to the .vote to separate it from the content it will be next to.
By default, <div> elements are block-level meaning they are one-per-line and will expand horizontally to fill their container.
Adding the click handling is another problem. You could include the <a> and <img> elements in the uparrow and downarrow elements or you do it in CSS as you suggested (the less compatible way). Another option is registering DOM events with Javascript.
HTML:
<div class="vote">
<div class="uparrow" />
<div class="downarrow" />
</div>
CSS:
div.vote {
width: 50px;
float: left;
}
div.uparrow {
background-image: url(...);
}
div.downarrow {
background-image: url(...);
}
Use 2 divs. Float the text div left and put the two images in a single div. use display: block on the images to force one below the other.
A more semantic and efficient solution than divs would be this, which also takes care of positioning the vote box.
.content-item {padding-left:110px;position:relative; width:500px;border:1px solid red;}
.vote{width:100px;position:absolute; top:0; left:0;border:1px solid red;}
.vote h4 {style heading how you like}
.vote img{width:100px;height:30px;background:black;}
<div class="content-item"> content
<div class="vote">
<h4>Vote</h4>
<img alt="vote up" src="..." />
<img alt="vote down" src="..." />
</div>
</div>