1230sharp.com
For some reason the background images are scrolling with the website. I have the value "background position:fixed" and background-attachment:"local" and I'm getting the same issue.
1230sharp.com/#services - any suggestions?
Ok so because ie8 doesnt support background-attachment:local
it uses background-attachment:fixed. If you remove that you should be fine.
Meaning do not use either one for .section div or anywhere you dont want to the background to scroll.
I removed both of them and it worked for me in chrome and ie8 :)
UPDATED
You can actually switch to background-attachment: scroll instead of local and that should work as well for both ie8 and chrome and others.
source here
EDITED
Use background-attachment: scroll !important; that way it should overwriting the local in current browsers like chrome and remember to clear your cache
Related
I am working on a web application that allows me to insert some custom css for the front page.
I want to have a full screen background image at the start page. I understand that I can use background-size:cover which is supported in all latest version of browsers.
body {
background-image:url(/File/Publisher/Start/startpage_background.jpg);
background-repeat:no-repeat;
background-size:cover;
}
This works for latest version of Firefox and Chrome. However, it is not working in IE11. The background image does not shrink to cover the entire screen. It displays at its original size and is partially cropped off.
Using F12 to debug, I discover that if I disable either margin-top or margin-bottom (see screenshot), background-size property will work.
I do not want to modify the margin property introduced by the original CSS of the web application. Any way to resolve this problem?
I came across this as well and found that giving body any height makes the cover property have effect as long as it's not set as a percentage. For good order, min-height: 100vh should do :
http://codepen.io/anon/pen/oXmzLL?editors=010
Pretty odd since there's no issue on any other browser but that's IE for ya. Of course it's only present if the content doesn't exceed the window size (edit - it should also not have positioning that takes it out of the document flow).
Not the quickest answer by the way but it's the only topic I came across on this subject (that wasn't about legacy browser support)...
The full scope of my specific issue is likely too deep to include in a question here. Instead I am looking for clues.
The nature of the problem has to do with overflow: hidden. In Internet Explorer 11 it is working sometimes and at other times not. I have an element that is larger than the body and I have set the body element to overflow: hidden. Sometimes the page loads and works exactly as expected, but in about 60% of my tests the browser just ignores this property. If I look in the inspector the property and value are present, yet are not having any affect on the rendering of the page.
I have tried using a container element instead of the body, but the same thing happens. opening the inspector panel while scrolled to the top of the page will sometimes fix the issue. Any ideas?
There is a lot going on with this layout which is why there is no fiddle. Everything else works fine in IE. There are no errors in any browser and the layout works perfectly in all other browsers I have tested (Chrome, Safari, Firefox, Opera and IE 11).
Are you using a display properly on that div or element? If you have display: inline then try to change to display:block.
I am not sure why this worked but I just positioned the body fixed. That seems to work.
I have a mysterious (at least for me) css background image problem, that I run into only with Google Chrome. I have found similar topics, but unlike those, here no Javascript, JQuery or anything else is involved, it is pure CSS. It's just not working as it should.
If you open up the page www.bodrogietterem.hu, the background image should be below the entire content area (as it is in other browsers). In Chrome a horizontal and vertical white area is appearing.
Once you start scrolling, the background image appears all okay, and it stays there from then on. Similarly, when you open the dev tool with inspect element, the background image is immediately there, and stays there, too.
this is the pertaining css:
body.page-node-1 div#main{
background:#FFFFFF url('/sites/all/themes/bodrogietterem/images/bodrogi_bodrogi.jpg') bottom;
background-repeat:no-repeat;
background-attachment:fixed;
background-position:50% 135px;
padding-bottom:0px;
margin-bottom:0px;
}
and attaching two screengrabs on how it looks like, and how it should look like (well, I'm not allowed to attach these, as a new user, but have a look here:
http://www.bodrogietterem.hu/chrome_issue.JPG
and here
http://www.bodrogietterem.hu/should_look_like.JPG
It happens on sub-pages, too, but I think the root of the problem must be the same.
I'm using Vista, with up to date Chrome (20.0.1132.57), and up to date other browsers. btw, the second screenshot was taken in Chrome, too, but after opening the dev tool
many thanks for your kind help,
bests,
Zsolt
The latest version of Chrome is 21.0... so try updating chrome browser and see if it appears ok in the latest version. The screenshots lead to a 404 error page, so try uploading the screenshots again.
I also checked the page in IE7, IE8, IE9 the page looks good in all 3, IE7 however shows a horizontal scrollbar at bottom but the background image looks ok.
Your page looks fine in Chrome in windows 7 (Chrome 20.0.1132.57)
I have had problems in the past where various toolbars / addons that have been installed interfere with the CSS on a page quite significantly rendering Chrome to appear to bug out in isolated incidents. Try running chrome with no addons / plgins installed and see if it fixes your problem.
One observation on your CSS: #content contains floated elements that aren't cleared. I dont think that's the problem here but could be mixed with the above possibly.
Let me know if that helps at all.
Thanks for your helpful thoughts, I finally managed to resolve the problem.
While fiddling around, I measured the height of the white area, and it turned out to be 135px (which is exactly the top position of the background in the CSS above). So I decided that for whatever reason, that attribute was causing the problem, and I was right.
as a quick and dirty solution, I added 135px of white area to the top of the background image, and set the background-position property's top to 0px - which immediately fixed the issue.
as for the vertical white area, it was resolved by binding the background image to the #main-wrapper div instead of the #main div (it is a Drupal 7 build). Again, I don't exactly know why, but it fixed the problem instantly.
I love, how the web should be precise and logical, and it still stays random and ad hoc at times
thanks again for your time and effort, bests,
Zsolt
Had the same problem with two pages of http://www.stoerbeton.nl but I think I solved it after reading your above posts and some thinking.
The problem was probably in the general background: url; attribute and loading of the website css. I replaced all general background: #222222 url repeat etc.; for background-image:; , background-repeat:; and background-color:; etc.
Please let me know if your website works after editing your css. I'm still testing.
Greets, aquaster.nl
I have the two images below.
They are the same image, with one having a slight glow effect on the text.
They are setup as below:
<div id="header"><a></a></div>
withe the original image being the background for the div, and the 'glow' image being the background for the anchor tag, with display:block; width: 100%; height: 100%;opacity: 0;
i am the using the below jquery code
$('#header a').hover(
function() {$(this).animate({"opacity":"1"}, 1000);},
function() {$(this).animate({"opacity":"0"}, 1000);});
to fade the anchor image in and out on hover.
this works fine in firefox, chrome ect.
But in internet explorer the image is given a solid black background where there is transparency.
How can i fix this?
NB: I am only worried about ie7/8 not 6.
http://webspirited.com/header-reachsniper.png
http://webspirited.com/header-reachsniper-hover.png
Update
I have decided that this is simply not worth my time to do in internet explorer.
However this works perfectly in ie9, so i guess ill remove this effect for browsers less that ie9.
In order to set the opacity of a transparent PNG image, you need to use the AlphaImageLoader filter, even in IE8.
EDIT: You also need to add the alpha filter in the CSS, like this:
filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.AlphaImageLoader(src="path", sizingMethod="scale"),alpha(opacity=100);
Otherwise, jQUery will clear the existing filter as it adds the alpha filter.
This post from Dave Shea's mezzoblue.com may help you: http://mezzoblue.com/archives/2010/05/20/ie8_still_fa/
It notes all of the methods which he tried, and the final solution he arrived at the end:
What did work was a little library
called DD_belatedPNG that applies PNG
transparency via VML instead of
AlphaImageLoader. It’s designed for
IE6, but it works just fine in IE7 as
well. For IE8, I was forced to throw
out an X-UA-Compatible meta tag and
step IE8 down to IE7 mode for this
particular page.
With a tiny caveat at the end
It’s still not perfect. I noticed a
faint white bounding box poking
through at lower opacities that forced
me to slightly adjust hover effects
for all versions of IE. But you know,
for all that, it’s darn well good
enough.
I've got a simple webpage with a centered background image around the main div. The background image renders fine in IE and Firefox, but on Webkit-based browsers (Chrome, Safari), the background image only partially renders when the page is initially loaded. It's almost as if the browser just quits trying to render it. If I resize the browser window, or click on any of the links on the page, the background image shows fully. Here's the site: http://www.jnrtunes.com.
I've tried various CSS hacks, preloading images, etc and nothing seems to fix the problem. Has anyone had similar issues? Is there a problem with my HTML or CSS? I'm a realtive noob to HTML/CSS, so any advice would be appreciated. Thanks!
For some reason, it's the overflow: auto on the #wrapper div that does it. Don't ask me why, but there seems to be your problem.