using a div to blur an image behind it? [duplicate] - css

This question already has answers here:
How to use CSS (and JavaScript?) to create a blurred, "frosted" background?
(10 answers)
Closed 9 years ago.
Is it possible to code a div to enable it to blur whatever image is under it?
something like this:
Could this be done somehow with -webkit maybe?

Not with CSS on its own, but you can pull a similar effect off with Canvas and the StackBlurforCanvas library. See this
UPDATE: Looks like backdrop-filter was recently introduced to Webkit nightly, so eventually we'll be able to do this with CSS only. Yay!

Unfortunately this can't be done purely using CSS. Although webkit-filter supports blur, it doesn't support blurring anything other than the element that it applies to.
There is a more hacky way to do this, described here - http://css-tricks.com/blurry-background-effect/

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Is it possible to make divs overlap like cards *just* using css [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Partially overlap elements using CSS
(3 answers)
Closed 11 months ago.
Currently my site looks like this (making a browser based card game), please ignore the art for now - screenshot - I would like them to overlap slightly rather than wrapping around and creating a new line almost like someone is holding the cards. I have no idea where to even start with this without using js so I was wondering if anyone could help me come up with a solution that just uses pure css solution.
You can use margin-left and margin-right with negative values. Or you can set the card positions by using position: absolute and left and top properties.

Why chrome devtools showing this?Body color is not working [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How do I prevent my style from being overridden another style on a surrounding div?
(6 answers)
Closed 1 year ago.
why body color is not working?
and i am seeing this in devtools . the problem is marked on the picture.
i got the solution . just written this as base a{color:red}
This is no bug. The body color is overwritten by something else, as wOxxOm pointed out. You might wanna take a look at this Q&A.
Either you use the !important attribute in your CSS or give the specific part you want colored a more specific selector. The CSS styles priorities decline from specific to general.

Make a container transparent only when another div is over [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
How to make a child div transparent?
(2 answers)
Closed 5 years ago.
So as exposed in the title, i'd like to make a part of a container transparent, but only where there is another div, I know I can't tell it clearly, then I made an example :
I don't know if it is possible doing this, using ONLY CSS, I can't use JQuery, not even Javascript.
Thank you in advance for your answers :)
No, this can't be done with CSS alone. However, as CBroe has said, you could apply the same background image to the second/inner to give the illusion that it's transparent.

Cross-Browser CSS solution for fixed, stretched to height background image [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
Closed 10 years ago.
Possible Duplicate:
Stretch and Scale CSS Background
I am looking for a way to have a background with the following properties:
- be fixed
- stretch proportionally to window height
- cross-browser or at least solutions for all browsers.. (IE especially)
I have searched everywhere but I can't seem to find something to truly work..
Thank you.
reviving the horse? :D anyways, this can't be done by plain CSS.. or can it?
there's what they call background-size:cover in CSS3 (CSS3 is synonymous to "drop that old browser"). otherwise, i'd go for the JS solutions for the sake of older browsers.
here's a demo in w3schools (not a good reference but at least it has a demo)
Is this what you want
http://css-tricks.com/perfect-full-page-background-image/
http://ringvemedia.com/
http://www.fiskebussen.se/

Styling scroll bars with CSS [duplicate]

This question already has answers here:
CSS customized scroll bar in div
(20 answers)
Closed 7 years ago.
I tried searching online but I didn't find any good sources on this. Is there a way to style scroll bars with pure CSS so that it is compatible with a maximum number of browsers?
You can style scrollbars in Internet Explorer and Webkit only.
Note that these are not standard properties.
However, you can achieve this with JavaScript. One project that does this is jScrollPane.
Adding my 2 pence a little late, but if you really want to style them I would suggest trying http://jscrollpane.kelvinluck.com/. It's not a pure CSS solution like you are looking for but is a solution of sorts.

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