I would like help with code that will show a different slideshow section on Shopify based on the users screen size. I am using the code below which works great on a mobile device but on my laptop I see both slideshows.
What code do I need to add to hide the mobile slideshow when the screen size is above a certain amount of pixels?
#shopify-section-mobile-slideshow {
display: none !important;
}
#media (max-width: 450px){
#shopify-section-slideshow {
display: none !important;
}
#shopify-section-mobile-slideshow {
display: block !important;
}
}
Question answered by #stenley -
Use inspector elements to ascertain the section ID
For me:
#shopify-section-1586161998623 { display: none; }
#media (max-width: 768px){
#shopify-section-slideshow {
display: none !important;
}
#shopify-section-1586161998623 { display: block; }
}
Hi I am looking for some help in regards to understanding why the following page does not show up on a mobile size screen (480px) as all the other pages that have been built show up fine.
http://leicesterbakery.co.uk/index.php/product
I have a module class suffix with the following styles within the media queries in order to control what is shown on a mobile and what is shown a desktop.
(media query with max-width: 480px)
.range_full {
display: none;
}
.range_resp {
display: block;
}
Normal CSS file
.range_full {
display: block;
}
.range_resp {
display: none;
}
Would appreciate it if somebody could advise as really cant work out this isnt showing up.
You have a display: none on .range_full
Change it to block and it will show:
#media (max-width: 480px) {
/***** BASIC LAYOUT *****/
.range_full {
display: block;
}
.range_resp {
display:block;
}
.fullrange_full {
display:none;
}
On my page (test online at visal.de/trb/) I currently try to hide one element and show another when the user is on mobile. The blocked element is the top navigation (Glossar & FAQ and Intern), the element I only want to show to mobile users is the element "Weiterführendes".
I tried nearly everything, like this media query:
/* topfix */ #media (max-width: 479px) {
#header nav ul.hide-top, #header .hide-top {
display: block;
visibility: hidden;
}} #media (max-width: 600px) {
/* Header */
#header nav ul.hide-top li {
display: none;
visibility: hidden;
}
#header nav ul.hide-top li .phone {
display: block;
visibility: hidden;
}
but nothing really seems to work. I guess because the code more than once says that it should be displayed whenever, but in the end say that it shouldnt be shown. Possibly this is what occuring the errors. Anyone knowing a fix or what I did wrong?
A media query with max-width tells the browser to apply the styles when the browser shrinks to that size. Min-width is the opposite. It tells to browser to apply the styles when the browser grows to that size.
In the second media query you listed, which is the first one that will activate when shrinking your browser, you're telling it to display: none which will hide the element and will remove the space it occupies. You're also setting visibility: hidden which will only hide the element but not remove the space it occupies. Using visibility here is redundant.
In the first media query, which is the second one that will activate when shrinking your browser, you're telling it to display: block which will undo the previous display: none, but you're still also setting the visibility: hidden, rather than switching it to visibility: visible, so the element still won't display.
Here's a simple example of a mobile-first approach, rather than desktop-first like your example, to show / hide a class.
.my-mobile-image {
display: none; /* This is how it looks on mobile */
}
#media (min-width: 600px) {
.my-mobile-image {
display: block; /* This is how it looks on desktop */
}
}
you are not using the media queries in the right way . you should describe the min and max lenght of the screen
for mobile screen
#media screen and (min-width:299px) and (max-width:479px) {
display: block;
visibility: hidden;
}
other screen resolution
#media screen and (min-width:480px) and (max-width:600px) {
/* Header */
#header nav ul.hide-top li {
display: none;
visibility: hidden;
}
#header nav ul.hide-top li .phone {
display: block;
visibility: hidden;
}
}
i hope it will work can't test it right now at the moment
Many site designs call for a dark background with a lighter foreground page that contains the site's content. When using Bootstrap, it seems logical that one would merely apply the light color to the .container div and be done with it. However, Bootstrap's container does not provide any padding between its edges and the columns within, so this solution provides a light background but with the column content flush with the edges - not a good look.
This is a common problem and there are several solutions on stackoverflow and elsewhere for Bootstrap 2, but I couldn't find anything useful for Bootstrap 3.
One of the Bootstrap 2 solutions involved using .container-fluid which switches the internal grid from pixel to percentage based. Then one may apply padding to a a background div within .container-fluid and the internal columns will seamlessly adjust to fit. This seemed like a good approach, but the specific CSS used to tweak some of the other styles didn't work with Bootstrap 3.
After digging through the Bootstrap source, I noticed that the only difference between the .container and .container-fluid rules, in grid.less are three media queries. I wrapped my page's content in .container-fluid then overrode its definition with one that included the media queries so that the page content would respond the same as the header and footer, which use the standard .container.
Here's the HTML:
<html>
<head>
<title>Bootstrap 3 Container Padding Example</title>
</head>
<body>
<div class="page-container">
<div class="container-fluid">
<div class="page-bg">
<!-- PAGE CONTENT -->
</div>
</div>
</div>
</body>
</html>
And then the .less:
.page-container > .container-fluid:first-child {
.container-fixed();
#media (min-width: #screen-sm-min) {
width: #container-sm;
}
#media (min-width: #screen-md-min) {
width: #container-md;
}
#media (min-width: #screen-lg-min) {
width: #container-lg;
}
}
Then added padding to the .page-container div:
.page-container {
.page-bg {
padding: 15px;
background-color: #EFEFEF;
}
}
body {
background-color: #333
}
This seems to work. I haven't completed the styling for the interfaces that will reside within this container yet so there could be issues down the road but everything seems to render fine so far.
Here is a working example of this solution on codepen.io.
Note that the solution above uses less.css after including Bootstrap's variables and mixins .less files. Here's the compiled CSS:
.page-container > .container-fluid:first-child {
margin-right: auto;
margin-left: auto;
padding-left: 15px;
padding-right: 15px;
}
#media (min-width: 768px) {
.page-container > .container-fluid:first-child {
width: 750px;
}
}
#media (min-width: 992px) {
.page-container > .container-fluid:first-child {
width: 970px;
}
}
#media (min-width: 1200px) {
.page-container > .container-fluid:first-child {
width: 1170px;
}
}
.page-container .page-bg {
padding: 15px;
background-color: #EFEFEF;
}
body {
background-color: #333333;
}
I'm attempting to use some media queries for a website I'm building. The problem I'm having however, is while the media query styles are actually being applied, they're being overridden. I can't for the life of me tell why because I'm using the same exact selectors. Can anyone point out something that I'm not seeing?
ORIGINAL CSS
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner {
width: 85%;
height: 100%;
margin: 0 auto;
position: relative;
}
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner > nav {
background: #fff;
padding-bottom: 20px;
box-shadow: 0 4px 2px -2px gray;
}
MEDIA QUERY CSS
#media screen and (max-width:1024px) {
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner {
width: 100%;
}
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner > nav {
display: none;
}
}
The second media query is working fine, where I set the nav to have a display of none. However, when I try to set the width of #global-wrapper-inner to 100% it doesn't apply. I can see the style being "applied" when I press F12 and select that element. However, the style itself is crossed out and not actually applied and it still has the original width of 85%.
The selectors in your original CSS have the same specificity as the selectors within your media queries (the first declarations are also targeting the same property - width) and because the media query rule set is being overridden I'm going to assume that it appears before the original rule set.
The second media query selector works because it's targeting a property that wasn't set in your original CSS, so specificity isn't relevant.
To have the first media query selector take precedence, prepend an ancestor element to it:
#media screen and (max-width:1024px) {
body #global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner {
width: 100%;
}
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner > nav {
display: none;
}
}
You need to link the media query file (queries.css) later than the normal css file (style.css). That way the rules in the queries.css will override those in style.css.
I have been at least 2 hours trying to find the override CSS problem till I found that my line comments where wrong... And the second definition of CSS wasn't working:
So, don't be so stupid as I !:
/* LITTLE SCREENS */
#media screen and (max-width: 990px) {
... whatever ...
}
/* BIG SCREENS */
#media screen and (min-width: 990px) {
... whatever more ...
}
never use: Double bar as I did:
// This is not a comment in CSS!
/* This is a comment in CSS! */
Here is the answer. (at least what worked for me)
I've had this problem before, and it took me a while to realize what I did, but once I figured it out it's actually pretty easy.
Ok so imagine I have this as the html
<main>
<div class = "child1"> </div>
<div class = "child2"> </div>
</main>
and then this as the CSS
main .child1{
height: 50px;
}
/* now let's try to use media quaries */
#media only screen and (max-width: 768px) {
.child1{
width: 75%;
}
}
The code above won't affect the .child. Just like someone mentioned above, the main .child1 overrides .child1. So the way you make it work is to select the element just like we did at the very beginning of the CSS above.
/* this will work */
#media only screen and (max-width: 768px) {
main .child1{
width: 75%;
}
}
So as a conclusion... select the elements the same way every time.
Meaning ... for example in the above code, in your CSS, you should either select it as main .child1throughout the whole CSS or .child1 or else they get mixed up, one ends up overriding the other.
From the code you submitted, this probably won't resolve your issue. However, in your CSS if you are nesting styles inside of one another:
.main-container {
.main {
background: blue;
}
}
A media query for .main won't work because of the nesting. Take .main out of .main-container and then the media query will work as assumed:
.main-container {
}
.main {
background: blue;
}
Check if your media query braces are equal.
Sometimes it is very subtle but when you miss a single brace the rest of the media queries mentioned for certain break points will not work
example:
#media(min-width: 768px) and (max-width: 991px){
#media (max-width: 767px){
.navbar-brand p {
font-size: .6em;
margin-top: 12px;}
.navbar-brand img {height: 20px;}
#collapsable-nav a {
font-size: 1.2em;
}
#collapsable-nav a span {
font-size: 1.2em;}
}
Here you can see i have started the braces for max-width:991px but forgot to end so the next set of codes in media query for max-width:767px will not work.
It is a very simple mistake but took hours because of lot of braces in the codes.
Hope it helps. Happy Coding!
What about using !important? If you range your media query from ( min-width: 176px ) and ( max-width: 736px ) or even up to 980px?
There can be some reasons because of which this type of error may occur.
I myself faced this issue where I was not able to understand what I am needed to do and was confused that, does media query just overrides the elements.
Here's what I understood:
MEDIA QUERY CSS:
#media screen and (max-width:1024px) {
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner {
width: 100%;
}
#global-wrapper-outer > #global-wrapper-inner > nav {
display: none;
}
}
here you were able to override #global-wrapper-inner > nav i.e., 2nd media query selector, by display: none;
because you never added the display line in the original css, because of which there was nothing to override you just have given that display type should be none.
Whereas just in the 1st media query selector you already had given width:80%;
Basically media query doesn't override as far as I have understood but it take precedence, like already explained by one of them
by which media query comes to work:
https://stackoverflow.com/a/19038303/15394464
also if still did not get your doubt clear, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acqN6atXVAE&t=288s
then this might help.