So, I am designing with a fixed width. I just want the gutters to be flexible. So, I tried just using parent div's with 100% width. As you can see in this fiddle:
http://jsfiddle.net/P3Ckk/115/
What I intended was for what is happening with the fixed div ("nav" div) to happen. When the user window gets too small, I'd like the 100% width to collapse upon the fixed width elements (in this case, 1000px) and enable horizontal scrolling.
However, my parent width:100% does not work like that with relative positioning. The "top" "title" and "container" divs all stop at whereever the screen stops. I suppose that is 100% but it leaves the fixed width content overflowing these (now) smaller parent divs!
Additionally, the problem also shows up when a vertical scrollbar comes down. The area to the vertical scrollbar is considered 100% and the remaining gets left blank. This also creates a horizontal scrollbar to view this "extra" part.
What is the best solution here? Should I abandon my parent div 100% width approach?
I've tried making the these 100% divs have min-width:1000px, but that doesn't seem to work. I'm just a bit stumped here.
Any help appreciated. Thanks!
I've read about this before. Before you can use 100% in a div width you must set the css of both your body and html tags to 100%.
html,body{
width: 100%;
}
or else it will stop at the edge of the screen on any device.
Related
I want the margin to be be an irregular shape that is fixed so that as I scroll up and down, the spacing of the words will automatically readjust to fit around the shape.
to start I tried making a square using this styling in CSS to make it wrap and stay fixed:
float: left;
shape-outside: square;
position: absolute;
however it seems it cannot float to wrap the text and have the position stay fixed to stop it scrolling out of view, at the same time.
without "position: absolute;" text wraps but shape and text scroll out of viewing range together. Apply it and the text no longer wraps and is behind square, which stays in its position.
if this had worked I would have just created a stack of different sized boxes that were filled transparent to create an irregular left hand margin.
I'm not sure any of this is even possible but if it is, I'm sure there's a much more effective way to do it... any solutions?
I am currently creating a responsive website. I noticed there is an issue with empty space on the right as you scrolling horizontally. I can remove the horizontal scroll by adding overflow-x: hidden. But it will not work on mobile devices such as iPhone and iPad.
So, I tried to add min-width because it will help to get rid of empty space. But I can't put min-width on full.css (e.g. min-width:1000px;) because it will set to full-width - see example below:
full.css
#wrapper {
width: 1000px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
responsive.css (less than 1000px)
#wrapper {
width: 100%;
margin: 0;
}
I was wondering if you know how to fix this issue? Let me know if you have a better option for it. Or should I create a new wrapper id?
Every now and then I have this problem, and a big part of solving the problem is identifying the element that's the culprit. I just came up with this little jQuery script you can run in your browser's JavaScript console to find which elements are wider than the body width, causing that annoying scrollbar to appear.
$.each( $('*'), function() {
if( $(this).width() > $('body').width()) {
console.log("Wide Element: ", $(this), "Width: ", $(this).width());
}
});
You Can hide the horizontal overflow using css code (and then the horizontal scroll bar will never show up again):
body{
overflow-x:hidden;
}
Link to the page? Chances are there is some kind of element inside the wrapper that is breaking past the browser window.
Often times it is with padding and widths. Keep in mind if you have an element inside the wrapper that is set to say 100% width and you add padding on the left and right of 20px. It will create a horizontal scrollbar because the element is 100% + 40 px.
So if you are building liquid elements inside a div you would do it like this:
#liquidelement {
width:96%;
padding:0 2%;
}
You need to subtract the padding from the widths, also always use percentages for the padding when doing layouts because it's fluid, not fixed.
Often times it's a matter of a single element which can cause the page to get the horizontal scrollbar. That can be a pain, but you can easily find out the offending element by this simple css trick
* {border:1px solid red}
You can also add the following properties if the element is hidden.
opacity: 1 ; visibility: visible;
Demo :https://codepen.io/i_abhi/pen/eYzpBjr
2020
If any of you using Boostrap and came across this question then here's the answer.
for Bootstrap Users
Wrap your .row with .container or .container-fluid and it will solve the issue.
Referring to your issue, the code appears to be correct. However, some elements inside might also affect the exact width and overflow your boundary. Might check all inside elements as well. You can use Firebug or Chrome Inspect Element.
No more than three steps are required here:
Scroll the horizontal bar to the right where you can see the extra empty padding.
Open an Inspect Element
This is done by holding ctrl + shift then pressing i
Scroll over all your elements, the element with the extra padding should protrude your pages content into that empty space created.
You can Use
#wrapper {
max-width:100%
width:100vw;
}
it work fine with me.
this is an old question and I know you found your answer
but I say this because I didn't see this anywhere else. maybe this help someone else.
if you use min-height in your CSS code, this causes a horizontal or maybe vertical useless scroll bar.
just delete it if it isn't important
I'm trying to position a div inside a div.
the outer div has a fixed width and heigt, the inner div contains some text, has a fixed height and automatically fits to the width of the outer div (default behavior, without "width: 100%").
When I now add position:relative to the outer div and position:absolute + bottom: 0 to the inner div, I just want the inner div to move to the bottom of the outer div, but keep the same width it had before. This works fine in most browsers (Internet Explorer 8+, Firefox, Opera), but in IE7 it reduces the width to fit the text inside the inner div.
Is there a clean and valid way to prevent this different behaviour in IE7?
You can see an example here: http://www.loud.fm/tmp (I'm talking about the black box at the inner bottom of the featured-slider-box.) Thank you in advance! :)
Since your already using absolute positioning to lock it to the bottom why not add
left: 0;
right: 0;
to your CSS as well.
When you perform position: absolute, you are breaking some of the relationship. In the example you mention, you'll notice that div of the black box belongs to an li element in which the li element has a static width set (of 590px). You could dynamically set the width of the inner div to that of the outer by using javascript on load to handle all situations. Otherwise, set a static width size that matches that of the parent.
I had a pretty similar issue with Div's being changed in width by IE7. A simple style tag solved it for me:
min-width: 100%;
After hours of trial and error, this was all it took. Hope it helps!
this is my first question on stackoverflow after doing a lot of research without the appropriate success :-(.
I'm struggling with the task to do a three-column-layout with various amount of content and thereby differing height for each columns content. But the columns should be of same height, so that their background-color reaches down to the bottom. So, I found examples like this
How to make rounded corners on equal height columns
and of course this one
http://matthewjamestaylor.com/blog/equal-height-columns-cross-browser-css-no-hacks
But they don't do the trick, as they use overflow:hidden and do a fake height pretty much longer than the page would ever be. So of course, the background-color of each column goes down to the bottom and further. That's fine, but not enough, as I do have to shape the content element's background with rounded corners. It should look like the image on following adress:
http://www.addorange.de/uploads/3columns_rounded_corners.jpg (sorry, I'm not allowed to post images yet :-()
Maybe anybody of you encountered a similar challenge to fix this by pure css.
Thank you,
Christian
Two solutions:
You can use display: table-cell for your three columns
Resize them with javascript
I have a box-shadow on my #primaryNav div. Unfortunately, the shadow is being covered/hidden by the background of the following #page element.
I tried to set a z-index of 100 to #primaryNav and a z-index of -100 to #page, but that does not fix my problem.
Any ideas what I'm doing wrong?
You need to define positioning for #primaryNav. Z-index only affects positioned elements.
I just added this in firebug and it fixed:
#primaryNav {
position: relative;
}
I would avoid using a negative z-index. Simply change z-index of #page to 0.
As jlego already said a relative position should fix it.
By the way I would suggest ensuring that there is no shadow left or right of the #primaryNav. Since #primaryNav has a width of 100% a shadow on the side makes a horizontal scrollbar appear.
For fixing this you could set a overflow:hidden to #iframe
I took a look at your site and I think the border-bottom property of #primaryNav is covering up your shadow.