I'd like to create an infinite horizontal div. However, I have no idea about how to do it.
Can someone help me to do it using this code as a start point?
Please, take a look at this image to understand how this infinite horizontal div should be.
Thank you!
By "infinite" i am assuming you mean to the end of the wiewport/window. You could try an absolutely positioned element;
this will be an overlay, appearing on top of anything in normal document flow
html
<div id="line"> </div>
css
#line {
position: absolute;
right: 0;
margin-left: 100px;
left: 50%; /* seeing as content is centered, make margin-left start at center of page */
bottom: 10%;
height: 20px;
background-color: red;
}
Demo at: http://jsfiddle.net/PstWc/2/
You can use a 1px high div set to 100% width:
<div class="inf_line">
</div>
.inf_line {width: 100%; height: 1px; background-color: #333; margin-bottom: 10px;}
Example.
Might not be the most elegant way to do it, but it's a way.
Related
Hey Stackoverflow Community,
I have a simple lightbox script with a few images on the page, but it somehow doesn't work as it should. When I use position:fixed on then the overlay, then it is full and the image sticks to the top, but when I use position:absolute, then it is cut half way through page and the image is gone to the top.
There must be something really easy I am missing, right? Maybe my HTML structure is wrong?
The error can be found here live - http://kriskorn.eu/lightbox-error/
Thank you for all the help!
Kris
here are two issues
1) you are using padding-top: 700px; in .main p which force the images to go down the page . and with position absolute the images can never display with overlay. the overlay div will go up with scroll .here position:fixed can work .Reason is with position fixed the content will move upside and the overlay will stay on fixed position.
2) you should use opacity:0.* or any light color .you are using 0.95 which will not display the content below the div.
this should work please check
#overlay {
background-color: rgba(255,255,255,0.3);
position: fixed;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
top: 0;
left: 0;
text-align: center;
/* display: none; */
}
with position absolute it will not cover all the page.
this is surprising. Why you are using this ??
.main p {
padding-top: 700px;
}
this can also be an option.
.main p {
padding-top: 10px;
}
#overlay {
background-color: rgba(255,255,255,0.3);
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
top: 0;
left: 0;
/* display: none; */
text-align: center;
}
It seems that the answer I was looking for is, that you can't have position:absolute without some kind of JavaScript code. I used position:fixed after all, because that was already working for me.
I have a fixed DIV. The page contents should be displayed after the DIV, but they are under the DIV - partially hidden by it. How can I avoid this?
Here is the DIV's style:
#top_div {
position: fixed;
float: left;
top:0;
width: 100%;
height: 20%;
background-color: black;
}
we do not know your entire code, but if it is like
<div id="container">
<div id="fixed">fixed</div>
//a lot of html code here
</div>
put some top-padding to the .container div, padding equal to the height of the fixed div
Take a look at this.
Fixed Div
HTML:
<div>Fixed div</div>Can we see this?
CSS:
div {
position: fixed;
}
Now without fixed
HTML:
<div>Not Fixed div</div>Can we see this?
CSS:
div {
}
Just to show you what the difference is. You can see the div as position: fixed is sitting on top of the content after. The div will stay in that place always on screen. Thats what fixed does. You do not want this (I don't think as you didn't explain what you want it to do) so just remove it.
Example of position:fixed working on a page that can scroll, you will see it is always on the screen.
Example Here
Do not used fixed as this is what causes the problem for you.
I think you are trying to achieve this (http://jsfiddle.net/6Q9w4/8/)
.header {
height: 20%;
background-color: #4679bd;
position: fixed;
width: 100%;
}
.content {
position: absolute;
top: 20%;
left: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
padding: 10px;
overflow: scroll;
}
Overview: I have a CSS3 pure navigation system on top of my page. I have a footer/copyright on bottom.
In the middle, I want a background image (parchment) cover, then on top of that parchment, I want a white layer for text with a left column and a right column. I can't seem to make it work using the relative position as my z-index doesn't seem to be working. If I put position "fixed", I can't use the right browser scroll anymore to go down. If I use position "absolute", then the background is right and the content on top is ok, but my navigation footer disappears. If I use position "relative", my navigation system is fine but the background doesn't show up anymore. It is ignoring the z-index....
The weird thing is I am using expression web 4 and it looks correct there...it just doesn't look correct on the web.
This is my site html to reproduce what I am seeing.
<!-- #BeginEditable "content" -->
<div id="page_content_back">
<div id="column_left">
<h1>About</h1>
<p>We are the best-Trust us</p>
</div>
<div id="column_right">
<h4>CONTACTS</h4>
</div>
</div>
<!-- #EndEditable -->
This is my css
#page_content_back {
position: relative;
background-image:url('../images/grayparchment_back.jpg');
background-size: cover;
z-index: 1;
width: 100%;
margin: auto;
padding: 0;
border-top-width: 1px;
border-top-style: solid;
border-top-color: #CCAA77;
}
#column_left {
position: relative;
margin: 0 50px;
padding: 0 2%;
z-index: 2;
top: 0px;
background-color: #fff;
float: left;
width: 65%;
height: 100%;
color: #393939;
}
#column_right {
position: absolute;
z-index: 3;
float: right;
right: 50px;
top: 370px;
width: 20%;
height: 100%;
margin: 0;
padding: 10px;
background-color: #fff;
}
Okay, the problem is your div#column_left. It has a float: left property. Floating an element takes it out of the flow, so there's nothing within the div#page_content_back to give it any height. Remove that float: left property from the inner div and you'll see the image appear behind it. From there, you can add other elements after that nested div and the image will expand to encapsulate the new element. That said, if you use float or position: absolute, you're removing the element from the flow and that background image won't respond to its presence as a result.
I am using transform: skew to create the effect of a down arrow on my banner image using both the :before and :after tags. The result should look like the following:
However, in IE 9-11 there seems to be a rounding issue. At some heights there is one pixel from the background image that shows below the skewed blocks resulting in the following:
In my case, the banner is a percentage of the total height of the window. Here is the some sample code which should be able to reproduce the problem:
HTML
<div id="main">
<div id="banner"></div>
<section>
<h1>...</h1>
<p>...</p>
</section>
</div>
CSS
#banner {
position: relative;
background-color: green;
width: 100%;
height: 75%;
overflow: hidden;
}
#banner:before,
#banner:after {
content: '';
display: block;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
width: 50%;
height: 1.5em;
background-color: #FFFFF9;
transform: skew(45deg);
transform-origin: right bottom;
}
#banner:after {
right: 0;
transform: skew(-45deg);
transform-origin: left bottom;
}
body {
background-color: #333;
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
#main {
max-width: 40em;
margin: 0 auto;
background-color: #FFFFF9;
position: relative;
height: 100%;
}
section {
padding: 0 1em 5em;
background-color: #FFFFF9;
}
And here a working example.
Yes, seems to be a rounding issue – and I don’t know of anything that one could do to fix this. It’s in the nature of percentage values that they don’t always result in full pixel values – and how rounding is done in those cases is up to the browser vendor, I’m afraid.
I can only offer you a possible workaround (resp. “cover up”) that seems to work – if the layout really is as simple as this, and the main content area has a white background, and no transparency or background-image gets involved there.
Pull the section “up” over the banner by a negative margin of -1px (eliminated top margin of h1 here as well, otherwise it adjoins with the top margin of the section – countered by a padding-top), so that its background simply covers up that little glitch:
section {
padding: 1em 1em 5em;
background-color: #FFFFF9;
position:relative;
margin-top:-1px;
}
section h1:first-child { margin-top:0; }
Well, if you look closely, that makes the corner of triangle look slightly “cut off” (by one pixel) in those situations where the rounding glitch occurs – if you can live with that (and your desired layout allows for it), then take it :-) (And maybe serve it to IE only by some means). If not – then sorry, can’t help you there.
This site http://doomedfromdayonemerch.bigcartel.com/ is currently scrolling too much down the page, this is because the footer (hidden) is at the bottom of the page. Even when i move the footer with CSS the page still scrolls the same amount. would like it to ideally to only scroll down a little bit. I did have overflow-y:hidden on the body, and although this did work, it doesn't allow for smaller screens/zooming in, as you then cannot scroll at all. Any help would be great! :)
In your CSS code add
html{
height:100%
}
The problem isn't with footer.
The problem resides in your div id="navigation"
I did some questions related to sticking footer into bottom of page. Check them out, maybe will help you.
I know an answer has been selected but let me explain a little further. You have the navigation div positioned relative, instead of absolute. It looks like you were trying to use absolute positioning because I see z-index in the navigation css. To use absolute positioning the parent element needs to be set to position: relative; and the element you want to have absolute needs to be set to position: absolute;
add position relative to #wrap
#wrap {
width: 740px;
height: 700px;
margin: 0 auto;
padding: 5px;
text-align: left;
position: relative;
}
and change navigation to absolute
#navigation {
z-index: 99;
position: absolute;
top: 175px;
padding-top: 10px;
padding-right: 5px;
margin-right: 4px;
height: 442px;
background: rgba(228, 228, 228, 0);
clear: both;
border-bottom-right-radius: 10px;
right: 10px;
}