It seems the only option available today is border=x where x is the thickness of the border. It looks really ugly as it outlines each choice in the group.
I want a simple border around all the choices. When I go into debug it I can manually add fram="box" to the generated Table html and it looks great.
I can't figure out how to add frame="box" to the xp:checkBoxGroup I've tried using attributes without success.
Any ideas?
If you use a xp:checkBoxGroup the XPages runtime puts the checkboxes in table cells and wraps it with a fieldset element. You can easily target that using some CSS. That's how I would solve this.
If you want a simple border around your checkbox group you can do this:
<style>
fieldset.xspCheckBox {
border: 1px solid #333333;
}
</style>
<xp:checkBoxGroup id="checkBoxGroup1">
<xp:selectItem
itemLabel="Blue"
itemValue="blue">
</xp:selectItem>
<xp:selectItem
itemLabel="Green"
itemValue="green">
</xp:selectItem>
</xp:checkBoxGroup>
Or if you want a border around every option you can use this:
<style>
fieldset.xspCheckBox {
border: 0;
}
fieldset.xspCheckBox label {
border: 1px solid #444444;
padding: 5px;
cursor: pointer;
}
fieldset.xspCheckBox label:hover {
background: #eeeeee;
}
</style>
(note that the :hover class isn't really necessary, but adds a hover effect to all options: depending on your browser requirements that might not be supported)
Just add a style with a border definition to your xp:checkBoxGroup:
<xp:checkBoxGroup id="..." value="..." style="border:1px solid black;">
...
</xp:checkBoxGroup>
Instead of putting the style directly into xp:checkBoxGroup definition you can use a css class.
Is it possible to change the layout of a checkbox without adding the label tag in CSS?
Things like this do not have any effect:
input[type=checkbox][disabled] {
background-color: green;
border: 10px solid red;
}
The only thing I found so far is how to change the opacity.
I'm not sure if this will be much use to you, but it does allow you to "style up" a checkbox without the need for a label. I've remove the disabled flag so you can swap between the different styles. Shouldn't be difficult to add it back in if this will work for you.
Fiddle is here.
input[type=checkbox]:checked:before {
background-color: green;
border: 10px solid red;
}
input[type=checkbox]:before {
content:'';
display:block;
height:100%;
width:100%;
border: 10px solid green;
background-color: red;
}
The above only works on Chrome, however, it seems like Chrome is in the wrong where the specification is concerned.
A fuller answer here: CSS content generation before or after 'input' elements
As of today there is no solution, if we assume a cross browser functional styling, to style the <input type="checkbox" > alone, other than a few properties like opacity, width, height, outline (and maybe a few more).
Using a label (or other content elements) is what you need to do that and here is a good (which this question is likely a duplicate of) post with lots of options: How to style checkbox using CSS?
Note: If you know more properties, feel free to update this answer.
Firefox, since version 23, natively supports the <input type="range"> element, but I couldn’t figure out how to remove the dotted outline. The following CSS has no effect:
input[type='range'],
input[type='range']:focus,
input[type='range']:active,
input[type='range']::-moz-focus-inner,
input[type='range']:-moz-focusring {
border: 0;
outline: none;
}
Does anyone have any idea how to fix this issue in Firefox?
Example: https://jsfiddle.net/pF37g/
Unfortunately, you can't! (update; you now can)
It's a bug in Firefox and there is no work-around to fix this besides from fixing the source base itself (see below).
Also see Jonathan Watt's blog (who is working on this):
Known issues:
the default CSS styled appearance still needs work, and native theming (giving the slider the appearance of the operating system's
theme) is still to come ...
In a reply to a comment in his blog about this very same issue he states:
Right now you can't - sorry. I've filed bug 932410 to make that
possible.
At the moment of writing there appear to be no progress on this and it's not known when a official fix will be available.
Update
Since this answer was posted the bug has been fixed. You can now use (as stated in other answers, but I include it here for completeness):
input[type=range]::-moz-focus-outer {
border: 0;
}
It can be done with new version of Firefox. As stated here, this bug is fixed. So it is possible to hide outer dotted border. To do so, set ::-moz-focus-outer's border to 0, like this:
input[type=range]::-moz-focus-outer {
border: 0;
}
Here is working example: http://jsfiddle.net/n2dsc/1/
In webkit browsers outer line will appear if -webkit-appearance: none; is set. To remove it, just set :focus's outline to none, like this:
input[type=range]:focus {
outline: none;
}
Here is working example: http://jsfiddle.net/8b5Mm/1/
As Ken already pointed out, there is no way to remove the outline. However, there is a work-around to "hide" the outline if you know the background-color of the parent element. Assuming a white background the following CSS would hide the dotted outline:
input[type=range] {
border: 1px solid white;
outline: 2px solid white;
outline-offset: -1px;
}
Your updated example: http://jsfiddle.net/9fVdd/15/
If you can settle for a wrapping element (it's likely you already have a wrapping LI or P), you can use FireFox-only CSS to position the input out of view and reposition the track/thumb in view.
Note 1 - don't try to use translateX - I think FireFox uses that to actually slide the thumb - so stick with translateY
Note 2 - Be sure to test with keyboard navigation. You should only move the input by the smallest amount possible to get the dotted lines out of sight. If you position it waaay far away (translateY(-1000em)) - then you will break usability for keyboard navigation.
Here ya go:
HTML
<span class="range-wrap"><input type="range" /></span>
CSS
.range-wrap {
overflow: hidden;
}
input[type='range'] {
-moz-transform: translateY(-3em);
}
input[type='range']::-moz-range-track {
-moz-transform: translateY(3em)
}
input[type='range']::-moz-range-thumb {
-moz-transform: translateY(3em);
}
http://jsfiddle.net/pF37g/98/
Dotted outline is not an issue, it's browser's way to show the input element is selected. What you can do is set tabIndex to -1 which will prevent your input element from taking focus on tab and, consequently, from having the outline:
<input class="size" type="range" tabIndex="-1" name="size" min="1" max="6" value="6"></input>
But after doing this you will lose some keyboard accessibility. It is better to have input element keyboard accessible.
Here is the fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/pF37g/14/
If any custom styling is applied to input[type='range'] then Firefox use a different model (beta) to render the range input.
You can see the 2 different models here:
http://jsfiddle.net/pF37g/75/
Currently I do not believe it is currently possible to have a custom CSS styled input range box in Firefox to adhere to outline: 0; as of Firefox 27.0
To make it complete: The Bug has been fixed and now it's working with:
input[type=range]::-moz-focus-outer { border: 0; }
to remove all outlines from all input-tags use:
input::-moz-focus-inner, input::-moz-focus-outer { border: none; }
source: https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=932410#c7
You can not. It seams to be a bug in Firefox.
It makes two outlines for the range element. One you can influence by css setting and a second, which is resistant against any manipulation.
I set the outline visible to show the issues:
input[type='range']:focus {
outline: 5px solid green;
}
Here you can see it:
http://jsfiddle.net/pF37g/97/
I have little research in config section of mozilla add this too
:-moz-any-link:focus {
outline: none;
}
a, a:active, a:visited, a:hover {
outline: 0;
}
then
:focus {
outline: none;
}
then
::-moz-focus-inner {
border: 0;
}
Here comes the solution
:focus {
outline:none;
}
::-moz-focus-inner {
border:0;
}
I am trying to remove the hover styling on the kendoui treeview component so that when you hover over an item in the treeview it does not have a border / background image etc. I have gotten rid of everything but the border as it looks like there are additional styles that are at play that I cannot seem to locate. Here is my css so far... (in addition to the default theme)
.k-treeview .k-in.k-state-hover{
background-image:none;
background-color:#fff;border:none;
}
.k-treeview .k-in.k-state-selected{
background-image:none;
background-color:#fff;color:#000;border:none;}
Currently it is just showing a border which looks to be black as opposed to the grey one that was there before I added the styles above... Any idea what I can do to get rid of this stubborn border?
With the addition of this style embedded on the page I was able to get it to do what I wanted. I believe this was partially related to how the css was being loaded (order) in multiple different sharepoint webparts on the same page...
.k-treeview .k-in.k-state-hover, .k-treeview .k-in.k-state-selected {
border-style: none;
border-width: 0;
padding: 2px 4px 2px 3px;
}
Coupled with the use of .k-state-disabled, it appears I might have found a slightly better CSS solution.
The nodes don't move at all, and it appears completely disabled.
.k-treeview .k-in.k-state-hover,
.k-treeview .k-in.k-state-focused,
.k-treeview .k-in.k-state-selected {
border-color:transparent;
background-color:transparent;
}
I've also added some JavaScript to prevent the expanding of the nodes, and disabling of the checkboxes.
In my case this helped:
.k-window-action .k-state-hover {
border: none;
background: none;
}
P.S.: "border-color: transparent" caused slight move on hover
Some other CSS files removed the border around all GWT CaptionPanels. Now I'm looking for a way to add the CaptionPanels border again through the GWT projects .css file. Do you have an idea how to do it? Simply adding a .gwt-CaptionPanel{} to the css file has no effect...
I'm answering my own question here.
It took me some time to figure out that GWTs CaptionPanel uses a fieldset under the hood. The following places a red 1 pixel solid border around GWT CaptionPaneles:
fieldset {
border: 1px;
border-style: solid;
border-color: #ff0000;
}
Im not experienced with GWT CaptionPanels but you can try to set an !important on the class that makes the borders in the main style sheet. So you get something like: .borders {border-width:1px !important}