Firefox 3.5.3 horizontal menu drop-off - css

URL: www.htiops.com
CSS: www.htiops.com/css/htiOps.css
The last two links in the gray horizontal nav bar are vertically dropping down in FF 3.5.3. It doesn't happen in older versions of FF, IE7, O8, Saf3.
Changing the font in #navBar ul li a from .8em to 10px fixes the drop-off problem, but is not the desired appearance of the menu.
Any thoughts?

The problem is that all the elements are too wide for the container and they are wrapping. I had the exact same thing in Wordpress recently. I shortened the text and it worked fine.
One thing that works - as a hack - is:
#navBar ul {
margin: 0px;
padding: 0px;
color: #fff;
float: left;
font-weight: bold;
display:block;
width: 120%; <-- from 100%
}
Perhaps you can play with the widths and get it all to fit, or shorten some words. (I know, it's a hack and I don't like them, but it's fast and looked ok to me :)

Related

Padding differences in Internet Explorer

My buttons appear as they should in Chrome and Firefox but the text fails to vertically center in Internet Explorer. Most times I success in getting around this problem but this time I'm stuck. A little help would be nice!
Here's the adress so you can see for yourself, the problem is within the header meny.:
http://spectra.macework.se
Here's my css:
#header-family_menu ul li a{
display:block;
font-size: 1.1em;
color:#000;
font-family:"SofiaProBold";
line-height: 1.3em;
padding: 9.0px 0 3.5px 0;
width:92.5%;
as you can see i've been trying to use line-height and padding to center my text but this time it fails in IE.

Zooming out breaks top navigation

When you zoom out on this site: https://www.zm-online.de/, it breaks the top nav on: PC: FF, Chrome, Safari (It's fine on IE9) on a MAC:Chrome and Safari (It's fine on FF).
I am thinking of fixing it on line number 598 and changing the padding from: 25 to 20, so the code will look like:
av#main_navi ul li a b.n2{
background: url("../_img/bg/mainnavi/bg_navi.jpg") repeat-x scroll 0 0 transparent;
color: #444;
font-weight: bold;
text-transform: uppercase;
height: 37px;
line-height: 37px;
/*padding: 0 19px;*/
/*padding: 0 25px;*/
padding: 0 20px;
text-align: center;
}
However, this did NOT work on a PC and a MAC with Safari and Chrome and it made the top nav not look quite right in "normal" view. Any help would be appreciated. :-) Thanks!
Rita
Hi try setting your padding as a %. Hope this helps.
Hey this is not a good solution but if you change font-size to 10px , the navigation doesn't break on Firefox.
And giving the float to the li makes some problems to me. I use display:inline-block for horizontal menu, display:inline-block is okay with IE,FF but Chrome has some bugs when your zoom level is 33% or 25%.
In my opinion try to design this nav with using display:inline-block.

CSS: Margin problem with Safari

On the site I'm working on, for some reason the margin is needing to be different for Safari than in FF, IE8, Chrome & Opera? I have a link that I want lined up next to a label. It's lining up fine in all but Safari which needs a 12 pixel difference. Here's a screenshot to better describe the issue: Click
The Safari screenshot shows the label down too low. This is the CSS I use for the working 4 browsers:
.submitter a {
float: right;
margin: -2px 0 0 2px;
padding: 0 !important;
}
And here's the code that works for Safari, however, usig it throws the link UP 12 pixels.
.submitter a {
float: right;
margin: -14px 0 0 2px; Works in Safari & Chrome
padding: 0 !important;
}
Anyone able to shed some light on this? TIA
This seems to sort it out:
.submitter a {
float: none;
display: inline !important;
margin: 0 0 0 2px;
}
It's really very convoluted in there due to nonsensical use of the cascade.
Some rules are being applied to elements where they really shouldn't be due to selectors like:
.box_777 ul li a
You'd be better replacing that selector with something like:
.individual-likes > a
But, it's difficult to predict how improving your selectors will change how your page displays.
The reason it goes up like that could be because of the - pixel value. Are they nested correctly in the div? And did you apply the same alignment (CSS, Html, etc.) for the Chrome buttons?
There is a lot going on, but you might try one of the following:
.submitter .smalltext { float: left; }
(or)
Move the "follow" anchor tag before the "smalltext" span
Looking at the site, the anchor is being set to block by .box_777 ul li a and then floated right by .submitter a.
If I remove the display: block; and float: right; things align.

1 pixel line height difference between Firefox and Chrome

Working on a new site design in asp.net with master pages. Header of the page is a 35px tall "menu bar" which contains an asp menu control rendered as an unordered list.
The selected menu item is styled with a differenct colored background and 2px border around the left top and right sides. The bottom of the selected menu item should line up with the bottom of the menu bar so the selected "tab" looks as if it flows into the content beneath. Looks fine in firefox and IE but in chrome the "tab" seems to be 1 pixel higher than the bottom of the menu bar.
Just wondering if there is some sort of bug I dont know about.
I realize that you will most likely need code to help with this problem so ill post up the css as soon as possible.
EDIT:
here is the css for the menu...
div.hideSkiplink
{
width:40%;
float:right;
height:35px;
}
div.menu
{
padding: 0px 0px 0px 0px;
display:inline;
}
div.menu ul
{
list-style: none;
}
div.menu ul li
{
margin:0px 4px 0px 0px;
}
div.menu ul li a, div.menu ul li a:visited
{
color: #ffffff;
display: block;
margin-top:0px;
line-height: 17px;
padding: 1px 20px;
text-decoration: none;
white-space: nowrap;
}
div.menu ul li a:hover
{
color: #ffffff;
text-decoration: none;
border-top: 1px solid #fff;
border-right: 1px solid #fff;
border-bottom: none;
border-left: 1px solid #fff;
}
div.menu ul li a:active
{
background:#ffffff !important;
border-top:2px solid #a10000;
border-right:2px solid #a10000;
border-bottom: none;
border-left:2px solid #a10000;
color: #000000 !important;
font-weight:bold;
}
div.menu ul a.selected
{
color: #000000 !important;
font-weight:bold;
}
div.menu ul li.selected
{
background:#ffffff !important;
border-top:2px solid #a10000;
border-right:2px solid #a10000;
border-bottom: none;
border-left:2px solid #a10000;
}
div.menu ul li.selected a:hover
{
border: none;
}
The selected classes are added to the li and a elements via jquery...
Here is a screenshot of the problem...
The chrome example is on the top and u can see 1px of red border below the tab.
On the bottom is the firefox image where everything looks OK.
EDIT:
After playing around with this a bit more, I have discovered that it is actually the "header" div itself that is growing by 1px in chrome... This seems very strange to me.
None of these answers solve the problem.
Set:
line-height: 1;
padding-top: 2px;
Because webkit & mozilla rendering engines implement line height differently do not use this it to manipulate measurement for single line items.
For items like menus, buttons and especially really small notification bubbles, reset the line-height to normal and use padding or margins to make them behave the same.
Here's a JSFiddle illustrating this issue:
http://jsfiddle.net/mahalie/BSMZe/6/
I just had this same problem, and I solved it by explicitly setting the line height and font size in <li> element that contains the <a> elements that are the tab links. Hope this helps someone in the future.
(edited html links)
This is a common issue I run into on some of my sites... when it's IE having the pixel difference, I can usually just add a pixel of margin/padding in my IE stylesheet. But when it's Safari/FireFox/Chrome, I usually just live with the pixel and make the FireFox crowd happy (for now—until Webkit rules the web!), even though it looks a little strange in the opposite browser.
However, you might also want to check out the line-height values (or add a value, if there isn't one already) on the containing ul or div element. Tinkering with that allowed me to get the padding exactly the same in FireFox, Chrome and IE.
Here is the solution that I found in this page :
button::-moz-focus-inner {
border: 0;
padding: 0;
}
I have been fighting with this problem for a little while now, and almost gave up on the pixel. However it's come to me in one of those eurika moments: if you get the tab lined up perfectly in Chrome (which leaves an overlap in Firefox), set the ul height to the height of the li (including any padding), you can remove the offending pixels in Firefox by setting overflow to hidden on the ul.
Hope this helps someone out there!
I had the same problem with my main tabs displaying them in Chrome, they were one pixel off in height and there for leaving an ugly slit between the tabs and the white background of the mainframe.
I solved the problem by giving the tab div an upper margin with a floated value. First tried margin-top:0.1px nothing then 0.2 etc. until with an upper margin of 0.5 everything displayed fine over all the major browsers.
I had the exact same issue, turns out chrome had zoom set to 110% and that was breaking the menu. I noticed it when I fired up chrome on another computer and it looked fine.
I had a similar issue and it was due to using ems for font sizes, margins and padding. The browsers were rounding the ems differently and causing intermittent off-by-1px issues all over the site depending on the length of content. Once I changed everything to pixel measurements my problems went away.
Hope this helps!
I've come across this problem in relation to text with transparent backgrounds.
I couldn't get any of the above solutions to work consistently so I ended up using a webkit hack to give those browsers a different line-height. Like so:
#media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) {
.your-class {
line-height:20px;
}
}
Eww, hacky! I try to avoid CSS hacks but I just couldn't find another way. I hope that helps someone.
I managed to solve this issue with a web font I was working with by setting the following:
.some-class {
display: inline-table;
vertical-align: middle;
}
Granted it's a bit hacky but does the job. It does mean though you will have target styles specifically for Internet Explorer
try using display:block with the a element"
eg...
<li>Link</li>
css:
li{line-height:20px;}/*example only*/
li a{display:block;}
I guess this is the only way , use different styles for different browsers the problematic sections
/* FOR MOZILLA */
#-moz-document url-prefix() {
.selector {
color:lime;
}
}
/* FOR CHROME */
#media screen and (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio:0) {
/* Safari and Chrome, if Chrome rule needed */
.container {
margin-top:100px;
}
/* Safari 5+ ONLY */
::i-block-chrome, .container {
margin-top:0px;
}``
if line-height is used for vertically aligning text in a container (which it shouldn't), then consistent behaviour across browsers can be enforced like this:
line-height: 75px
height: 75px
overflow: hidden
you can also make different css for mozila:
-moz-height:2em;
one can also use:
#-moz-document url-prefix{
// your css
}
It's important to realize that web pages will always render differently in different browsers. Acheiving pixel perfection is futile, and nowadays I try to explain to my clients what kind of cost is involved to make every browser render the site exactly alike. More often now, they understand that IE6 and FF4 won't ever render any page the same way. We must try to make our clients understand and embrace the dynamics of the web.
Progressive enhancement and graceful degradation. Peace.
I might be a beginner in CSS, but I found the same problem in W3Cschools.com, in one of their examples.
http://www.w3schools.com/css/tryit.asp?filename=trycss_sprites_hover_nav
this example is about image sprites. You can see in this example, in Chrome, the home icon and prev icon have the 1px divider line, which is not the case in Firefox.
It seems that in Chrome the pixel count is 1pixel different to that of Firefox.

Unordered list navigation - horizontal, fixed width and word breaking

I'd like to use an unordered list for displayign a horizontal navigation. This nav has to be a fixed width.
Markup:
<ul id="page-nav">
<li>RRSP Basics</li>
<li>Contribution Rules</li>
<li>Ways to Fund Your RRSP</li>
<li>Investment Options</li>
</ul>
And the CSS (so far):
#page-nav { width: 423px; height: 57px; margin: 0; padding: 0; }
#page-nav li { list-style: none; float: left; display: block; height: 35px; margin: 13px 8px 0 8px; padding: 9px 14px 0 14px; text-align: center; }
#page-nav li a { color: #1f1f1f; font-size: 10px; white-space: pre-line; }
If firefox, using white-space: pre-line breaks the words as necessary to fit the ul width. This doesn't work in IE6 or IE7, and I need to hit those browsers. In IE, the lis push down to the next line instead of breaking the words in the anchors. is not an option either as this will be content managed at some point.
How can I make the anchors break the words to fit the space available? I can't specify a common width for the list items, so that's not an option.
And how it should look:
Thanks.
Try Listamatic:
Can you take a simple list and use different Cascading Style Sheets to create radically different list options? The Listamatic shows the power of CSS when applied to one simple list.
Pick a list, you should be able to find an unordered list menu there that works.
pre-wrap and pre-line are not supported in IE < 8. So im not sure what an alternative is without resorting to a table :-(
This is untested, but setting a width on your li should do the trick.

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