hello i am make like this example which i get from www.xxxxxx.com
http://s1172.photobucket.com/albums/r568/novikoraharja/?action=view¤t=justanimage.png
i wanted too learn that so can you help me?
<div class="panjang">
<ul>
<li class="bungkus">
<div class="kiri"><img src="http://i1172.photobucket.com/albums/r568/novikoraharja/3.jpg"/> </div>
<div class="kanan">Very loooooong </div>
</li>
<li class="bungkus">
<div class="kiri"><img src="http://i1172.photobucket.com/albums/r568/novikoraharja/3.jpg"/></div>
<div class="kanan">Very loooooong text sooo lonngg </div>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
here the style
.panjang{width:400px;height;100px;}
.bungkus{width:200px; height:50px; background:yellow;}
.bungkus img { width:60px; height:40px; margin:5px 10px;}
.kiri { float:left; background:red; width:80px; height:50px; }
.kanan{vertical-align:middle; background:cyan; float:left;width:120px;height:50px;font-size:12px;vertical-align:middle;
}
here my works http://jsfiddle.net/76E4w/11/
i already add line-align:middle; or line weight but not work;
See working jsFiddle here:
Add display: table; to .bungkus.
Remove float: left; from .kanan.
Add display: table-cell; to .kanan.
When you find a web site doing it as you like,
the easiest thing is to run firefox with firebug
and to look which css applies.
centering could be done in different ways.
one is
text-align: center
An other approach is to set right/left margin to auto
margin: 0 auto;
Related
Having a menu like this (emphasized by a red rectangle)...
how can I (in pure CSS) make this responsive so that, if there is not enough width available, the menu turns into a drop-down list (or anyway something smaller).
The question is not about implementing the drop-down list itself, but how to switch from one content to the other depending on available space.
I know this is rather simple when using #media max-width queries, but the problem is that I do not know the actual with of the menu items at "design time" - especially because the text gets translated and/or changed, leading to different widths depending on the actual language displayed.
Perhaps, there is some CSS trick that makes a whole "text" line / content disappear if it does not fit the parent container?
Here's a solution I've just come up with that should do the job. I added some style to make the structure more evident but it's not pixel perfect, you'll have to take care of that. Run the snippet in full screen and resize the window to see it in action.
.table-row{
display: table-row;
}
.table-cell{
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: middle;
white-space: nowrap;
}
.wrapper{
height:75px; /*the height of your menu, it's critical to define this value equal to the horizontal menu height*/
overflow:hidden; /*this will hide the horizontal menu when the screen width is too small*/
}
.top_nav{
padding-right:120px; /*allow space for right section*/
background-color: green;
color:white;
}
.top_nav_background{ /* this serves as a background for the rest of the structure, pay attention if you have other z-indexed elements */
background-color:green;
height:85px;
width:100%;
position:absolute;
top:0px;
z-index:-1;
}
.floating-box {
height: 55px;
padding:10px;
float: left;
border: 1px solid #73AD21;
background-color:green;
}
.h-menu{
height: 75px;
float: left;
min-width: 150px;
background-color:yellow;
}
.h-menu-item{
height: 55px;
padding:10px;
border: 1px solid #73AD21;
}
.v-menu{
margin-top:20px;
height: 20px;
background-color:red;
}
.right-items{
position:absolute;
right:20px;
top:20px;
color:white;
}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
</head>
<body>
<div class="top_nav_background"></div>
<div class="top_nav table-cell">
<div class="wrapper">
<div class="floating-box">Left section.</div>
<div class="h-menu table-row">
<div class="table-cell h-menu-item">item1</div>
<div class="table-cell h-menu-item">item2</div>
<div class="table-cell h-menu-item">item3</div>
<div class="table-cell h-menu-item">long long long item4</div>
</div>
<div class="v-menu">v-menu</div>
</div>
<div class="table-cell right-items">Right section.</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
In one project I did I came up with a solution where you show part or all of the menu and only show it as a dropdown/side-menu when the screen gets smaller.
The sub-menu is optional and you can just use the main menu for your effect.
http://codepen.io/anon/pen/LRJoEB
<nav id="top-menu">
<ul>
<li class="link menu" tabindex="0">
Menu
</li>
<li class="link">
<a class="help" href="#">Help</a>
</li>
<li class="link">
<a class="account" href="#">My Account</a>
</li>
<li class="sub-nav">
<nav id="sub-menu">
<ul>
<li class="sub-link">
<a class="details" href="#">My Details</a>
</li>
</ul>
<div id="close-menu" tabindex="0"></div>
</nav>
</li>
</ul>
</nav>
Just change the bits and parts to fit your needs, should you get stuck just leave a comment ;)
edit
Just realised you don't want to be using any media queries. I'll see if I can come up with something in that direction, not off the top of my head.
I'm having trouble with WordPress, nesting box within a box.
Outside of WordPress this works fine. I'm sure there's just one or two parameters wrong.
The outer box is dp23, the inner box is dp22
For some reason there is spacing between the inner boxes (dp22) .
you can see the problem here: http://4tepiano.com/recommended-piano-books-2/
CSS code:
.dp101
{
float:left;
width:100%;
border:1px solid green;
display: inline;
clear: both;
margin:auto;
}
.dp75 {
width:84%;
border-color:gray;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
overflow:auto;
float: right;
text- align:left;
padding:10px;
}
.dp22 {
border:1px solid red;
HEIGHT: 1.2em;
margin:1px;
padding:1px;
font-size: .8em;
overflow:auto;
display: block;
}
.dp23 {
width:12%;
border:1px solid green;
float:left;
margin:1px;
padding:1px;
}
[edited]
.dp23 p {
display: none;
}
Html Code:
<div class="dp101" style="BACKGROUND-COLOR: #fdfcdc">
<div class="dp23" style="HEIGHT: 150px";><!--Left Column-->
<!--category--> <div class="dp22"> category </div>
<!--Title--> <div class="dp22" > Title </div>
<!--Author--> <div class="dp22" > Author </div>
<!--Price--> <div class="dp22"> Price </div>
<!--Link--> <div class="dp22"> Amazon Link </div>
<!--Cover--> <div class="dp22" style= "HEIGHT: 85px"; > Cover </div>
</div> <!--End-Left Column-->
<!--Right Column-->
<div class="dp75"style="HEIGHT: 150px"; >
Work in progress.
</div> <!--End-Right Column-->
<div class="dp75" style="HEIGHT: 10px";> <!--Right spacer--> </div>
I have used borders to make it easy to see. The boxes should be stacked together, with the borders touching each other.
You have random <p> tags in your code between your dp22 <div>s. They look somewhat like this:
<p>
<!--Author-->
</p>
Remove them or include the following code in your CSS:
p {
display: none;
}
Though that may cause other problems if you are actually using <p> tags elsewhere.
You have empty <p> tags between those elements - they actually have comments in them..
Remove the <p> elements between dp22, and your problem is solved.
Because your coding above doesn't demonstrate this, I am going to assume that wordpress is generating these <p> tags.. I suggest removing all the unnecessary spacing in your HTML.
Hi im trying to set some divs inline and i dont know what else to do.
.menuboton{
display:inline;
padding:0.7em;
border-radius: 4px;
background-color: #093;
}
.menu{
display:inline;
margin-right:4em;
}
There are two classes, first are 4 divs and the another is one div with an <img> inside. Those divs are inside another div:
#elmenu{
margin:auto;
margin-bottom:10px;
width:100%;
border-top:1px solid black;
border-bottom:1px solid black;
}
This is my problem: the 4 divs always are slightly below the one with the <img> inside and cross over the container div (elmenu). For fix that I tried setting it display:inline-block and fix the problem of exceds the container limit but still below the one with <img> inside.
Here the html code:
<div id="elmenu">
<div class="menu" id="logo"><img id="imglogo" src="psds/logo.png" /></div>
<div class="menuboton">Inicio</div>
<div class="menuboton">Posts</div>
<div class="menuboton">Login</div>
<div class="menuboton">Usuario</div>
</div>
Pics:
Using display:inline;
Using display:inline-block;
I want all divs stay at the same level!
Some guess?
Place the Knowit image in left and the menu in right and edit widths accordingly.
HTML:
<div class='container'>
<div class='left'></div>
<div class='right'></div>
</div>
CSS:
.container { overflow: hidden; margin:0; padding:0; }
.left{ float: left; width: 150px; }
.right { float: right; width: 150px; text-align:left; }
Edit on OP request:
To center object within div class use:
text-align:center;
to center align the div container use:
margin: 0 auto;
All this information can be found at http://w3schools.com/
You should try to use span instead of div. Also use float:left
vertical-align: middle on #elmenu should do the trick along with display: inline-block; on the logo and menu items.
first you should build your menu from a list or a nav tag.
Inline-block is a good idea, you can easily size and align your elements.
To build your menu you need:
inline-boxes
text-align:center.
line-height
float (just once)
First element (holding logo for instance) can float left.
set a line-height to size (min-)height of the nav bar.
here we come to this : http://jsfiddle.net/GCyrillus/CaR7a/
.menuboton {
display:inline-block;
padding:0.7em;
border-radius: 4px;
background-color: #093;
line-height:1.2em;
}
.menu {
float: left;/* logo */
}
#elmenu {
padding:0;
margin:0;
list-style-type:none;
line-height:48px;/* logo's height */
text-align:center;
border-top:1px solid black;
border-bottom:1px solid black;
}
a {
color:white;
text-decoration:none;
}
<ul id="elmenu">
<li class="menu" id="logo"><img id="imglogo" src="http://placehold.it/1&1" /></li>
<li class="menuboton">Inicio</li>
<li class="menuboton">Posts</li>
<li class="menuboton">Login</li>
<li class="menuboton">Usuario</li>
</ul>
I hope it is useful
Like my comment, the Css should like this
.menuboton{
float: left;
padding:0.7em;
border-radius: 4px;
background-color: #093;
}
.menu{
float: left;
margin-right:4em;
}
UPDATE:
HTML:
<div id="elmenu">
<div class="menu" id="logo"><img id="imglogo" src="http://www.winphoneviet.com/forum/data/avatars/l/35/35914.jpg?1370081753" /></div>
<div class="menuboton">Inicio</div>
<div class="menuboton">Posts</div>
<div class="menuboton">Login</div>
<div class="menuboton">Usuario</div>
<div style="clear: both;"></div>
</div>
This's Fiddle
I want to use a fixed header, with the content behind it. The menu will contain anchor links, so all the content will be in one page.
But, I got stuck at an early stage. I thought this would be no problem, but it seems like the header div is snapped to the content div somehow. It looks like they have the same margin.
If position:fixed; is removed, it looks like it should, but I want it to be fixed.
I really don't understand why this happens, since they're separated from each other. Using something like margin-top:-100px doesn't feel right.
Doing this should work without ugly solutions...
CSS:
#header {
position:fixed;
width:1200px;
border:1px solid black;
z-index:1;
overflow:hidden;
background-color:white;
}
#menu {
width:100%;
z-index:2;
}
#content {
margin: 100px 0 0 0;
background-color:red;
overflow:hidden;
width:1200px;
z-index: -1;
height:100%;
}
HTML
<div id="header">
<h1>Header</h1>
<div id="menu"><ul>
<li>Works</li>
<li>News</li>
<li>About</li>
<li>Contact</li>
</ul>
</div>
</div>
<div id="content">
<div id="works" name="works"></div>
<div id="news" name="news"></div>
<div id="about" name="about"></div>
<div id="contact" name="contact"></div>
</div>
<div id="footer"></div>
Add top: 0px; to your #header class
I'm looking for a super easy method to create a two column format to display some data on a webpage. How can i achieve the same format as:
<table>
<tr>
<td>AAA</td>
<td>BBB</td>
</tr>
</table>
I'm open to HTML5 / CSS3 techniques as well.
<style type="text/css">
#wrap {
width:600px;
margin:0 auto;
}
#left_col {
float:left;
width:300px;
}
#right_col {
float:right;
width:300px;
}
</style>
<div id="wrap">
<div id="left_col">
...
</div>
<div id="right_col">
...
</div>
</div>
Make sure that the sum of the colum-widths equals the wrap width. Alternatively you can use percentage values for the width as well.
For more info on basic layout techniques using CSS have a look at this tutorial
Well, you can do css tables instead of html tables. This keeps your html semantically correct, but allows you to use tables for layout purposes.
This seems to make more sense than using float hacks.
#content-wrapper{
display:table;
}
#content{
display:table-row;
}
#content>div{
display:table-cell
}
/*adding some extras for demo purposes*/
#content-wrapper{
width:100%;
height:100%;
top:0px;
left:0px;
position:absolute;
}
#nav{
width:100px;
background:yellow;
}
#body{
background:blue;
}
<div id="content-wrapper">
<div id="content">
<div id="nav">
Left hand content
</div>
<div id="body">
Right hand content
</div>
</div>
</div>
I know this question has already been answered, but having dealt with layout a fair bit, I wanted to add an alternative answer that solves a few traditional problems with floating elements...
You can see the updated example in action here.
http://jsfiddle.net/Sohnee/EMaDB/1/
It makes no difference whether you are using HTML 4.01 or HTML5 with semantic elements (you will need to declare the left and right containers as display:block if they aren't already).
CSS
.left {
background-color: Red;
float: left;
width: 50%;
}
.right {
background-color: Aqua;
margin-left: 50%;
}
HTML
<div class="left">
<p>I have updated this example to show a great way of getting a two column layout.</p>
</div>
<div class="right">
<ul>
<li>The columns are in the right order semantically</li>
<li>You don't have to float both columns</li>
<li>You don't get any odd wrapping behaviour</li>
<li>The columns are fluid to the available page...</li>
<li>They don't have to be fluid to the available page - but any container!</li>
</ul>
</div>
There is also a rather neat (albeit newer) addition to CSS that allows you to layout content into columns without all this playing around with divs:
column-count: 2;
There's now a much simpler solution than when this question was originally asked, five years ago. A CSS Flexbox makes the two column layout originally asked for easy. This is the bare bones equivalent of the table in the original question:
<div style="display: flex">
<div>AAA</div>
<div>BBB</div>
</div>
One of the nice things about a Flexbox is that it lets you easily specify how child elements should shrink and grow to adjust to the container size. I will expand on the above example to make the box the full width of the page, make the left column a minimum of 75px wide, and grow the right column to capture the leftover space. I will also pull the style into its own proper block, assign some background colors so that the columns are apparent, and add legacy Flex support for some older browsers.
<style type="text/css">
.flexbox {
display: -ms-flex;
display: -webkit-flex;
display: flex;
width: 100%;
}
.left {
background: #a0ffa0;
min-width: 75px;
flex-grow: 0;
}
.right {
background: #a0a0ff;
flex-grow: 1;
}
</style>
...
<div class="flexbox">
<div class="left">AAA</div>
<div class="right">BBB</div>
</div>
Flex is relatively new, and so if you're stuck having to support IE 8 and IE 9 you can't use it. However, as of this writing, http://caniuse.com/#feat=flexbox indicates at least partial support by browsers used by 94.04% of the market.
Well, if you want the super easiest method, just put
<div class="left">left</div>
<div class="right">right</div>
.left {
float: left;
}
though you may need more than that depending on what other layout requirements you have.
All the previous answers only provide a hard-coded location of where the first column ends and the second column starts. I would have expected that this is not required or even not wanted.
Recent CSS versions know about an attribute called columns which makes column based layouts super easy. For older browsers you need to include -moz-columns and -webkit-columns, too.
Here's a very simple example which creates up to three columns if each of them has at least 200 pixes width, otherwise less columns are used:
<html>
<head>
<title>CSS based columns</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>CSS based columns</h1>
<ul style="columns: 3 200px; -moz-columns: 3 200px; -webkit-columns: 3 200px;">
<li>Item one</li>
<li>Item two</li>
<li>Item three</li>
<li>Item four</li>
<li>Item five</li>
<li>Item six</li>
<li>Item eight</li>
<li>Item nine</li>
<li>Item ten</li>
<li>Item eleven</li>
<li>Item twelve</li>
<li>Item thirteen</li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>
If you want to do it the HTML5 way (this particular code works better for things like blogs, where <article> is used multiple times, once for each blog entry teaser; ultimately, the elements themselves don't matter much, it's the styling and element placement that will get you your desired results):
<style type="text/css">
article {
float: left;
width: 500px;
}
aside {
float: right;
width: 200px;
}
#wrap {
width: 700px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
</style>
<div id="wrap">
<article>
Main content here
</article>
<aside>
Sidebar stuff here
</aside>
</div>
I know this is an old post, but figured I'd add my two penneth. How about the seldom used and oft' forgot Description list? With a simple bit of css you can get a really clean markup.
<dl>
<dt></dt><dd></dd>
<dt></dt><dd></dd>
<dt></dt><dd></dd>
</dl>
take a look at this example http://codepen.io/butlerps/pen/wGmXPL
You can create text columns with CSS Multiple Columns property. You don't need any table or multiple divs.
HTML
<div class="column">
<!-- paragraph text comes here -->
</div>
CSS
.column {
column-count: 2;
column-gap: 40px;
}
Read more about CSS Multiple Columns at https://www.w3schools.com/css/css3_multiple_columns.asp
This code not only allows you to add two columns, it allows you to add as many coloumns as you want and align them left or right, change colors, add links etc. Check out the Fiddle link also
Fiddle Link : http://jsfiddle.net/eguFN/
<div class="menu">
<ul class="menuUl">
<li class="menuli">Cadastro</li>
<li class="menuli">Funcionamento</li>
<li class="menuli">Regulamento</li>
<li class="menuli">Contato</li>
</ul>
</div>
Css is as follows
.menu {
font-family:arial;
color:#000000;
font-size:12px;
text-align: left;
margin-top:35px;
}
.menu a{
color:#000000
}
.menuUl {
list-style: none outside none;
height: 34px;
}
.menuUl > li {
display:inline-block;
line-height: 33px;
margin-right: 45px;
}
<div id"content">
<div id"contentLeft"></div>
<div id"contentRight"></div>
</div>
#content {
clear: both;
width: 950px;
padding-bottom: 10px;
background:#fff;
overflow:hidden;
}
#contentLeft {
float: left;
display:inline;
width: 630px;
margin: 10px;
background:#fff;
}
#contentRight {
float: right;
width: 270px;
margin-top:25px;
margin-right:15px;
background:#d7e5f7;
}
Obviously you will need to adjust the size of the columns to suit your site as well as colours etc but that should do it. You also need to make sure that your ContentLeft and ContentRight widths do not exceed the Contents width (including margins).
a few small changes to make it responsive
<style type="text/css">
#wrap {
width: 100%;
margin: 0 auto;
display: table;
}
#left_col {
float:left;
width:50%;
}
#right_col {
float:right;
width:50%;
}
#media only screen and (max-width: 480px){
#left_col {
width:100%;
}
#right_col {
width:100%;
}
}
</style>
<div id="wrap">
<div id="left_col">
...
</div>
<div id="right_col">
...
</div>
</div>