I'm not so good at css, so I would like to if this is possible.
Let's say I am not happy with the position of an element, I want to move it from left to right; however I want to use drag and drop so the stylesheet automatically updates.
I am using Google Chrome, and would like to know if this is possible via Google Chrome Developer tools, or Firefox Web Developer toolbar.
Thank you.
You might wanna try dreamweaver, in the design tab, you can drap items from one place to another and it'll update the html and css code by it self
The developer tools available through the "Control the current page" icon are to analyze a page, not to change the design of a page.
You can find out which CSS rules apply at certain positions of the source, you can measure loading and processing times, etc, etc but you cannot change anything.
For your kind of problem you would need to look for a (graphical) design tool
Hope that helps - good luck
Related
I am new to CSS and just learned how to inspect an element. My question is how can i get a whole/full CSS code for an element?
Let say i need a full css code for a form (https://townends.co.uk) please see search form on homepage, How can i get that whole code for this module?
Thanks in advance.
A
Right click -> View Page Source from site.
Then find "< link rel='stylesheet'" keyword. You have all the css files associated.
Sounds like you could use the dev tools in your browser. They can be super helpful for seeing what actually is affecting different elements in your site. depending on which browser you are using the shortcut for it is different. My favorite suite of in-browser dev tools is in Firefox(check out the developers edition of Firefox as well).
From within the dev tools of Firefox you can click on the arrow pointing into a box from the highest level tabs. This allows you to hover over any element on your page and display the classes and ids affecting the element as well as the rules being used on the element in the dev tool partition of your screen at the bottom. There are many more useful tools in browsers so explore it a little and it will probably improve your productivity.
Is it possible to change CSS that google Chrome apply to websites.
I want to hide some elements for example on facebook to dont see it, becouse it eats half of my free time.
Something like
.facebook-wall{display:none;} -auto applied everytime I go to fb.
Assuming I understand you correctly...
This isn't for a website you're making
This is only for your own personal use
Use Tampermonkey.
https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/tampermonkey/dhdgffkkebhmkfjojejmpbldmpobfkfo?hl=en
It's supposed to work much like Greasemonkey (the Firefox add-on), and it should meet your needs.
Stylebot is a good extension. You can interactively build some custom CSS to apply to your choice of website.
It even seems to have an accompanying website where other people have shared their concoctions, so possibly somebody has already put together something to filter down Facebook feeds.
For some reason whenever I go to the page of my website that has the crystal report on it my main navigation bar disappears. Here is what the header for the site (with the navigation menu) is suppose to look like:
and here is what it looks like when there is a report on the page:
Could someone tell me what is causing this and how I can fix it?
I'm using master page for the header by the way.
Greener, the Crystal Report viewer is a dynamic HTML representation of the report. It combines JavaScript, HTML and CSS (duh, what doesn't) to represent your report on the webpage. The toolbars are powered by JavaScript calls to .JS that is linked in when the CrystalReportViewer control is rendered to your page.
My point is, all of this introduces a LOT of stuff that can conflict with your existing page. In particular JavaScript errors can occur (which can cause certain things to stop rendering) OR CSS the report uses happens to apply styles you never intended to have applied to objects in your page.
I highly recommend installing the Web Developer toolbar and/or FireBug to FireFox, IE, or whatever browser they are offered on these days. FireFox's implementation of those is quite good in my experience.
When the page loads you can use the 'CSS' menu of the Web Developer toolbar to actually disable some or ALL the styles applied to the page. If disabling Crystal related styles (or all) makes your missing toolbar appear, then it's probably a conflict in your CSS. A front end developer would know to adjust the styles (i.e. add the !important directive to a style, change class/id names, etc.) to address this.
Alternatively, FireBug may be reporting JavaScript errors (heck, even FireFox can show these in the console) which could indicate a problem that prevents the completion of rendering your toolbar.
An outside possibility is that the report itself contains mark-up. For example, if you had certain fields in the report contain HTML that happened to be rendered by the browser, this could create an open div tag, css styles and even JavaScript that would do all the stuff I explained above.
I hope this narrows it down for you. Happy troubleshooting!
I was having the same issue and after hours of searching I finally resolved it... check this out... http://scn.sap.com/thread/1926659
In the crystalreportviewer css file, I adjusted the div class = clear and changed the height attribute and disabled overflow:hidden. Hopefully, that works for you. Good luck!
I found the solution after searching on the web and is a quite simple.
On the Site Master, change the Name for all the places you have the style "clear" for example "clear1" and change it too en the site.css with that name.
The problem is for the conflic with the namespaces with Crystal Report css.
Hope this help.
I hate Firefox, I really do, but as a web developer I'm chained to it b/c of the robust set of tools that Firebug offers. Recently Chrome and Safari's inspection tools allowed users to edit full chunks structural code (in a very buggy manner), but you still can't edit full stylesheets. Usually when someone brings this up, Chrome and Safari developers say "BUT YOU CAN EDIT CSS," and that's true, to an extent. You can edit CSS property-by-property (which takes forever if you have a lot of changes) in both browsers, but there is no way to see the full computed stylesheet, make edits within it, and immediately see the results. To date, only a full install of Firebug on Firefox allows you to do this.
Has there been any momentum in either of the Chrome or Safari camps to build a plugin to match this unparalleled function? Cheap plugins that allow you to insert CSS into the page are not the answer. It's really simple:
Have a list with the current stylesheets that are being referenced
Choose the one you want to edit, and click an edit button
See all the code in the stylesheet
Make changes and see them reflected on the page immediately
Is it really that hard to build something that does this? I think it must be, b/c why else would the developer communities of two browsers completely ignore it? If there's something out there that now offers this capability, I'd love to hear it; otherwise, maybe someone will step up to the plate and develop it for either Chrome or Safari. It seems like the guys who developed the CSS Edit app would be all over this.
Thanks to you I found it!
The Live Stylesheets extension for Chrome is what you are looking for. Be sure to restart Chrome after installation to use it.
You can edit external stylesheets in Chrome DevTools, too (since Chrome 15 or so). Just double-click the stylesheet contents in the Resources panel (or click the "Edit" button below), edit, Ctrl-S to commit a new revision, Esc to cancel editing. And it updates your page as you type!
You can edit your CSS files directly on Chrome without relying on any extension.
Here is how: Edit CSS files on the fly using Chrome DevTools
A different way to access it:
right click the page, select inspect
on the DevTools, click on "Sources"
locate the css on the "Network" pane and click it
change the css and save it ( by pressing ctrl+s )
Here's my current workflow for editing CSS:
Me: "Take a look at this page!"
Guys: "Try making the post titles bigger"
Right click on a post title, choose "inspect" (to inspect it in firebug)
Find the appropriate CSS statement in Firebug (h2.post_title or something)
Modify the CSS in Firebug, ask friends how it looks
If it looks good, make the change again in Textmate
I want to avoid step 6. I.e., I want the ability to edit CSS via a Firebug-like UI and be able to commit my changes to the relevant file immediately (rather than having to copy them by hand as I do with Firebug)
Edit: Something that works on a Mac would be ideal
Have you tried "Web Developer" extension in Firefox? It allows you to open, edit and save CSS files.
http://www.skybound.ca/
Go forth and be enlightened. This is truly a life changing program.
Another possible workflow:
"Hey guys, take a look at this page!"
"Try making the post titles bigger"
Make the change to the CSS file
Hit reload
I only use Firebug for debugging (eg: "why is this thing getting that style?") not for making changes when I know where they need to go in the CSS. This workflow does depend somewhat on being able to reload the CSS easily. If you're working on an app where hitting reload completely disrupts your state it might not be ideal.
Check out Backfire:
http://blog.quplo.com/2010/08/backfire-save-css-changes-made-in-firebug/
Haven't tried it, but sounds promising.
Check out my contribution to this problem:
http://www.cssupdater.com
Step 6 would then be:
6: One click on the "Sync now" button in Firebug!!
The click sends your changes to the desktop application, which syncs your orignal css files.
You can also choose the changes you want to sync in the application. It works with your favorite text editor or IDE and on both Windows and Mac!
Heureka?
XRefresh with "Soft Refresh" enabled may help your workflow, but you still need to know what CSS selectors do you want to add/edit.
What's why I'm developing LIVEditor, because I don't want to manually redo the change again in the text editor after tweaking my css styles in Firebug (or the likes).
Backfire (see post below) was created specifically for Quplo (http://quplo.com), which is a tool that specificly does what you describe. You write html and css, then talk about what needs to be changed, make the changes (using firebug or web developer toolbar) and hit save.