This question already has answers here:
CSS: Background image and padding
(9 answers)
Closed 3 years ago.
I'd like to add a background to a div, position right center, but!, have some padding to the image. The div has padding for the text, so I want to indent the background a little. probably makes most sense w/ example:
http://jsbin.com/umuvud/edit#javascript,html,live
Thanks!
Updated Answer:
It's been commented multiple times that this is not the correct answer to this question, and I agree. Back when this answer was written, IE 9 was still new (about 8 months old) and many developers including myself needed a solution for <= IE 9. IE 9 is when IE started supporting background-origin. However, it's been over six and a half years, so here's the updated solution which I highly recommend over using an actual border. In case < IE 9 support is needed. My original answer can be found below the demo snippet. It uses an opaque border to simulate padding for background images.
#hello {
padding-right: 10px;
background-color:green;
background: url("https://placehold.it/15/5C5/FFF") no-repeat scroll right center #e8e8e8;
background-origin: content-box;
}
<p id="hello">I want the background icon to have padding to it too!I want the background icon twant the background icon to have padding to it too!I want the background icon to have padding to it too!I want the background icon to have padding to it too!</p>
Original Answer:
you can fake it with a 10px border of the same color as the background:
http://jsbin.com/eparad/edit#javascript,html,live
#hello {
border: 10px solid #e8e8e8;
background-color: green;
background: url("http://www.costascuisine.com/images/buttons/collapseIcon.gif")
no-repeat scroll right center #e8e8e8;
}
this is actually pretty easily done. You're almost there, doing what you've done with background-position: right center;. What is actually needed in this case is something very much like that. Let's convert these to percentages. We know that center=50%, so that's easy enough. Now, in order to get the padding you wanted, you need to position the background like so: background-position: 99% 50%.
The second, and more effective way of going about this, is to use the same background-position idea, and just use background-position: 400px (width of parent) 50%;. Of course, this method requires a static width, but will give you the same thing every time.
Method 1 (99% 50%)
Method 2 (400px 50%)
There is actually a native solution to this, using the four-values to background-position
.CssClass {background-position: right 10px top 20px;}
This means 10px from right and 20px from top.
you can also use three values the fourth value will be count as 0.
you can use background-origin:padding-box; and then add some padding where you want, for example: #logo {background-image: url(your/image.jpg); background-origin:padding-box; padding-left: 15%;}
This way you attach the image to the div padding box that contains it so you can position it wherever you want.
In case anyone else needs to add padding to something with background-image and background-size: contain or cover, I used the following which is a nice way of doing it. You can replace the border-width with 10% or 2vw or whatever you like.
.bg-image {
background: url("/image/logo.png") no-repeat center #ffffff / contain;
border: inset 10px transparent;
box-sizing: border-box;
}
This means you don't have to define a width.
first off, to be a bit of a henpeck, its best NOT to use just the <background> tag. rather, use the proper, more specific, <background-image> tag.
the only way that i'm aware of to do such a thing is to build the padding into the image by extending the matte. since the empty pixels aren't stripped, you have your padding right there. so if you need a 10px border, create 10px of empty pixels all around your image. this is mui simple in Photoshop, Fireworks, GIMP, &c.
i'd also recommend trying out the PNG8 format instead of the dying GIF... much better.
there may be an alternate solution to your problem if we knew a bit more of how you're using it. :) it LOOKS like you're trying to add an accordion button. this would be best placed in the HTML because then you can target it with JavaScript/PHP; something you cannot do if it's in the background (at least not simply). in such a case, you can style the heck out of the image you currently have in CSS by using the following:
#hello img { padding: 10px; }
WR!
To add space before background image, one could define the 'width' of element which is using 'background-image' object. And then to define a pixel value in 'background-position' property to create space from left side.
For example, I'd a scenario where I got a navigation menu which had a bullet before link item and the bullet graphic were changeable if corrosponding link turns into an active state. Further, the active link also had a background-color to show, and this background-color had approximate 15px padding both on left and right side of link item (so on left, it includes bullet icon of link too).
While padding-right fulfill the purpose to have background-color stretched upto 15px more on right of link text. The padding-left only added to space between link text and bullet.
So I took the width of background-color object from PSD design (for ex. 82px) and added that to li element (in a class created to show active state) and then I set background-position value to 20px. Which resulted in bullet icon shifted inside from the left edge. And its provided me desired output of having left padding before bullet icon used as background image.
Please note, you may need to adjust your padding / margin values accordingly, which may used either for space between link items or for spacing between bullet icon and link text.
Related
How would I add a small arrow beside the links that have a drop down in css?
background: url('arrow.png') no-repeat 0 0;
When I use this it adds an arrow on the left side of EVERY link but i want it only on the ones that have a sub menu.
Any help?
Use this:
background: url('arrow.png') no-repeat right top / 70% 70%;
The 70% percentages are for example, they are the width and height of the background size, change them as they suit you. (Since you wanted it smaller in your original question).
Apply this rule to the class of the links that will have a drop down.
Based on the other answers you've had it looks like your question has changed considerably... but to answer it as it stands, if you just want it on SOME of the links, you could add an additional class to those links, and add your background image just to that class.
http://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css3_pr_background.asp is a good reference for any sort of CSS syntax questions.
The way that you defined the CSS rule puts the arrow at the top left. To have it centered on the right, for example, use:
background: url('arrow.png') no-repeat right center;
I would also suggest adding a padding if you do that, so that the background image is not behind the text:
padding-right: 15px;
And to make padding work, you'll need to override the display of the links from inline to inline-block:
display: inline-block;
To resize the arrow, you could either just use a smaller image, or you could use the background-size attribute, although using the latter would lose support for IE8 and below.
I have this situation using CSS.
I want an image to be in the center of the screen, doesn't matter the size of the screen, always in the middle. That's pretty easy to do.
But, the image (.png) I want to be in the middle is black and has some transparent letters in it.
So, I want the whole screen to be black, but still have transparent letters in the middle of the screen.
The reason I want transparent letters is because I'm using a script to fill the letters while the page is loading. The idea is based on a progress loading bar, but in this case, using letters as the 'bar'.
How can I achieve that? I have tried surrounding the image with divs but it's not the best way since depending on the screen size, some divs may not reach the image and left a blank space.
What do you suggest? What should I read?
Just in case I didn't make myself clear, here is an image:
The best option I can currently think of, to black out the screen around the centered img is to use box-shadow:
#main {
position: absolute;
top: 50%;
left: 50%;
margin: -250px 0 0 -250px;
box-shadow: 0 0 0 500px #000;
}
JS Fiddle demo.
This does, of course, require that the browser supports the box-shadow property (or at least one of the vendor-prefixed implementations), and also takes a fairly arbitrary number for the 'spread' of the blur.
Unfortunately, while I'd rather use the border property the border affects the layout and must be compensated for in positioning the img, whereas the box-shadow doesn't affect the layout of the page.
With this demonstration, obviously, the background-color should be replaced by a background-image or whatever alternative you're using to represent the loading bar.
So you want the whole screen black, but you have transparent letters that you want to be seen?
IF i understand what you want correctly, could you make the background color of the body (or html object) black, keep the image, but put a white (or colored) image directly behind the logo using absolute positioning.
I guess I don't understand why you want the transparent letters, but a black background.
The web site is here.
See that blue bar behind the menu items? It's 40 pixels high and one pixel wide, and used as a repeating background - so, why does it look strange after the right-most menu item?
The image is here, if anyone needs it.
The image is used thusly:
.menu_bar
{
background-image: url("http://leonixsolutions.com/images/menu_background.jpg");
background-repeat: repeat-x;
font-size: large;
padding-left: 160px;
padding-top: 5px;
text-align: center;
}
Nothing is wrong with it,
Your menu container div.pd_menu_01 has a background color #ffffff remove it and you'll be fine...
The real problem here is that .pd_menu_01 extends too far to the right (and with its white background, covers the gradient). Try making it inline-block with an auto width, or something similar, so that it doesn't extend further to the right than it has to. You could also set its background color to transparent (but in my browser, .pd_menu_01 makes the page too wide and thus introduces unnecessary and ugly horizontal scrollbars, so the width solution is still relevant).
.pd_menu_01 has a background color of white declared, and is a div. Since divs are block level elements, they have a default width of 100%.
Either declare the div to be display:inline, wrap the menu in a span instead of a div, or make the background color transparent instead of white.
I think the answer is no, but can you position a background image with CSS, so that it is a fixed amount of pixels away from the right?
If I set background-position values of x and y, it seems those only give fixed pixel adjustments from the left and top respectively.
background-position: right 30px center;
It works in most browsers. See: http://caniuse.com/#feat=css-background-offsets for full list.
More information: http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-background/#the-background-position
It is possible to use attribute border as length from the right
background: url('/img.png') no-repeat right center;
border-right: 10px solid transparent;
There is one way but it's not supported on every browser (see coverage here)
element {
background-position : calc(100% - 10px) 0;
}
It works in every modern browser, but it is possible that IE9 is crashing. Also no coverage for =< IE8.
As far as I know, the CSS specification does not provide for exactly what you're asking, outside of CSS expressions, of course. Working off the assumption that you don't want to use expressions or Javascript, I see three hackish solutions:
Make sure your background image matches the size of the container (at least in width) and set background-repeat: repeat or repeat-x if only the width is equalized. Then, having something appear x pixels from the right is as simple as background-position: -5px 0px.
Using percentages for background-position exhibits special behaviour that is better seen than described here. Give it a shot. Essentially, background-position: 90% 50% will make the right edge of the background image line up 10% away from the right edge of the container.
Create a div containing the image. Explicitly set the position of the containing element position: relative if not already set. Set the image container to position: absolute; right: 10px; top: 10px;, obviously adjusting the final two as you see fit. Place the image div container into the containing element.
Try this:
#myelement {
background-position: 100% 50%;
margin-right: 5px;
}
Note though that the code above will move the whole element (not the background image only) 5px from the right. This might be ok for your case.
You can do it in CSS3:
background-position: right 20px bottom 20px;
It works in Firefox, Chrome, IE9+
Source: MDN
Image workaround with transparent pixels on the right to serve as right margin.
The image workaround for the same is to create a PNG or GIF image (image file formats that support transparency) which has a transparent portion on the right of the image exactly equal to the number of pixels that you want to give a right margin of (eg: 5px, 10px, etc.)
This works well consistently across fixed widths as well as widths in percentages.
Practically a good solution for accordion headers having a plus/minus or up/down arrow image on the header's right!
Downside: Unfortunately, you cannot use JPG unless the background portion of the container and the background color of the CSS background image are of the same flat color (with out a gradient/vignette), mostly white/black etc.
If you happen to stumble on this topic in these days of modern browsers you can use pseudo-class :after to do practicaly anything with the background.
.container:after{
content:"";
position:absolute;
right:20px;
background:url(http://lorempixel.com/400/200) no-repeat right bottom;
}
this css will put background to bottom right corner of ".container" element with 20px space on the right side.
See this fiddle for example http://jsfiddle.net/h6K9z/226/
The most appropriate answer is the new four-value syntax for background-position, but until all browsers support it your best approach is a combination of earlier responses in the following order:
background: url(image.png) no-repeat 97% center; /* default, Android, Sf < 6 */
background-position: -webkit-calc(100% - 10px) center; /* Sf 6 */
background-position: right 10px center; /* Cr 25+, FF 13+, IE 9+, Op 10.5+ */
If you want to specify only the x-axis, you can do the following:
background-position-x: right 100px;
Just put the pixel padding into the image - add 10px or whatever to the canvas size of the image in photohop and align it right in CSS.
I was trying to do a similar task to get a dropdown arrow always on the right side of the table header and came up with this which seemed to work in Chrome and Firefox, but safari was telling me it was an invalid property.
background: url(http://goo.gl/P93P5Q) center right 10px no-repeat;
After doing a bit of messing around in the inspector, I came up with this cross-browser solution that works in IE8+, Chrome, Firefox, and Safari, as well as responsive designs.
background: url(http://goo.gl/P93P5Q) no-repeat 95% center;
Here is a codepen of how it looks and works. Codepen is written with SCSS - http://cdpn.io/xqGbk
You can position your background image in an editor to be x pixels from the right side.
background: url(images_url) no-repeat right top;
The background image will be positioned in top right, but will appear to be x pixels from the right.
Works for all real browsers (and for IE9+):
background-position: right 10px top 10px;
I use it to RTL WordPress themes.
See example: temporary website or the real website will be up soon.
Look at the icons at the big DIVs right corners.
Another solution I haven't seen mentioned is to use pseudo elements and I do believe this solution will work with any CSS 2.1 compliant browser (≥ IE8,≥ Safari 2, ...) and it should also be responsive :
element::after
{
content:' ';
position:relative;
display:block;
width:100%;
height:100%;
bottom:0;
right:-5px; /* 10 px from the right of element inner-margin (padding) see example */
background:url() right center no-repeat;
}
Example: The element eg. a square sized 100px (without considering borders) has a 10px padding and a background image should be shown inside the right padding. This means the pseudo-element is a 80px sized square. We want to stick it to the right border of the element with right:-10px;. If we'd like to have the background-image 5px away from the right border we need to stick the pseudo-element 5px away from the right border of the element with right:-5px;...
Test it for your self here : http://jsfiddle.net/yHucT/
If the container has a fixed height:
Tweek the percentages (background-position) until it fits correctly.
If the container has a dynamic height:
If you want a padding between your background and your container (such as when custom styling inputs, selects), add your padding to your image and set the background position to right or bottom.
I stumbled on this question while I was trying to get the background for a select box to fit say 5 px from the right of my select. In my case, my background is an arrow down that would replace the basic drop down icon. In my case, the padding will always remain the same (5-10 pixels from the right) for the background, so it's an easy modification to bring to the actual background image (making its dimensions 5-10 pixels wider on the right side.
Hope this helps!
Tweaking percentages from the left is a little brittle for my liking. When I need something like this I tend to add my container styling to a wrapper element and then apply the background on the inner element with background-position: right bottom
<style>
.wrapper {
background-color: #333;
border: solid 3px #222;
padding: 20px;
}
.bg-img {
background-image: url(path/to/img.png);
background-position: right bottom;
background-repeat: no-repeat;
}
.content-breakout {
margin: -20px
}
</style>
<div class="wrapper">
<div class="bg-img">
<div class="content-breakout"></div>
</div>
</div>
The .content-breakout class is optional and will allow your content to eat into the padding if required (negative margin values should match the corresponding values in the wrapper padding). It's a little verbose, but works reliably without having to be concerned about the relative positioning of the image compared to its width and height.
Its been loong since this question has been asked, but I just ran into this problem and I got it by doing :
background-position:95% 50%;
Solution for negative values. Adjust the padding-right to move the image.
<div style='overflow:hidden;'>
<div style='width:100% background:url(images.jpg) top right; padding-right:50px;'>
</div>
</div>
Better for all
background: url('../images/bg-menu-dropdown-top.png') left 20px top no-repeat !important;
This works in Chrome 27, i don't know if it's valid or not or what other browswers do with it. I was surprised about this.
background: url(../img/icon_file_upload.png) top+3px right+10px no-repeat;
This question already has answers here:
Position a CSS background image x pixels from the right?
(21 answers)
Offset a background image from the right using CSS
(17 answers)
Closed 2 years ago.
I want to set a background image for a div, in a way that it is in the upper RIGHT of the div, but with a fixed 10px distance from top and right.
Here is how I would do that if wanted it in the upper LEFT of the div:
background: url(images/img06.gif) no-repeat 10px 10px;
Is there anyway to achieve the same result, but showing the background on the upper RIGHT?
In all modern browsers and IE down even to version 9 you can use a four-value syntax, specified in CSS3:
background-position: right 10px top 10px;
Source: MDN
Use the previously mentioned rule along with a top and right margin:
background: url(images/img06.gif) no-repeat top right;
margin-top: 10px;
margin-right: 10px;
Background images only appear within padding, not margins. If adding the margin isn't an option you may have to resort to another div, although I'd recommend you only use that as a last resort to try and keep your markup as lean and sementic as possible.
There are a few ways you can do this.
Do the math yourself, if possible. You already know the dimensions of your image. If you know the dimensions of the div, you can just put the image at (div width - image width - 10, div height - image height - 10).
Use Javascript to do the heavy lifting for you. Pretty much the same method as above, except you don't need to know the dimensions of the div itself. Javascript can tell you.
A more hackish way would be to put a 10px transparent border around the top and right of your image, and set the position to top right.
I don't know if it is possible in pure css, so you can try
background: url(images/img06.gif) no-repeat top right;
and modify your image to incorporate a 10px border on the top and right in a transparent color
You can use percentages:
background: url(...) top 98% no-repeat;
If you know the width of the parent div it should be pretty easy to determine what percentage you need to use.
One solution is to absolutely position an empty div, and give that the background. I don't believe there's a way to do it purely with CSS, no changes to the image, and no extra markup in a fluid layout.
You can fake the space on the right hand side with a border in pixels (white most of the time or maybe something else)
background-image: url(../images/calender.svg) center right
border-right: 5px white solid
The correct format is:
background: url(YourUrl) 0px -50px no-repeat;
Where 0px is the horizontal position and -50px is the vertical position.
CSS background-position accepts negative values.