center kitty? in jsFiddle? - image-scaling

http://jsfiddle.net/TurtleWolf/P7xKm/
All I'm trying to do is center/stretch an image regardless of monitor size so it always fills up the background with the full image. No more or less than the complete horizontal of that image
... Any suggestions?

This will fill the horizontal:
<div id=container>
<img src="http://placekitten.com/g/200/300" style="width: 100%;"/>
</div>
Fiddle Link: http://jsfiddle.net/YSnDa/
If you also want it to stretch the vertical (wasn't clear if that's what you wanted as well, you can add the height definition too:
height: 100%;
Ideally, you should extract this out to a class to separate your HTML/CSS:
<style>
.bg_image {
width: 100%;
}
</style>
And then apply the class to your image:
<img src="http://placekitten.com/g/200/300" class="bg_image" />

http://jsfiddle.net/P7xKm/2/
text-align:center

If you want to make the image stretch to fill the background completely, then:
img {
width:100%;
height:100%;
}
should do it.

img {
width:cover;
}
Is what I've started using recently

Related

Horizontal align text below flex-items

Image captions are aligned bottom by flexbox within a gallery where images have different heights. How can I achieve that first lines of text (titles) are aligned horizontally?
<style type="text/css">
* {
box-sizing: border-box; }
.flex-container {
display: flex;
flex-wrap: wrap; }
.flex-item {
width: 50%;
padding: 20px;
display: flex;
flex-direction: column; }
.flex-item img {
width: 100%;
height: auto; }
.flex-image {
flex: 1 0 auto; }
</style>
<div class="flex-container">
<div class="flex-item">
<div class="flex-image">
<img src="img-1.jpg" alt="" />
</div>
<p>title</p>
</div>
<div class="flex-item">
<div class="flex-image">
<img src="img-2.jpg" alt="" />
</div>
<p>title<br>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.</p>
</div>
</div>
Please check my codepen: https://codepen.io/tinusmile/pen/MoeORG
Many thanks!
With the existing markup, where the images can have different heights, you need to do something like this, where you give the p a height.
As an element's overflow defaults to visible, it will flow out of its boundaries, so I recommend to set the height so it can accommodate 2-3 lines of text.
On smaller screens you might need to add a #media query to adjust that height, as if the text is very long it might overflow any element below itself.
.flex-item p {
height: 50px; }
Updated codepen
Note, using min-height instead would solve the might overflow any element below itself issue, though it will make the first line to not align horizontally if the value does not accommodate all the possible amount of lines.
Another option is to remove the flex-item wrapper and use Flexbox's order property, as I suggested in a previous question of yours, align-horizontally-3-elements-over-3-divs

Getting rid of whitespace when using raw EL Expression in NetBeans [duplicate]

There will be a 4 pixel wide space between these span elements:
span {
display: inline-block;
width: 100px;
background-color: palevioletred;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span>
<span> Bar </span>
</p>
Fiddle Demo
I understand that I could get rid of that space by removing the white-space between the span elements in the HTML:
<p>
<span> Foo </span><span> Bar </span>
</p>
I'm Looking for a CSS solution that doesn't involve:
Altering the HTML.
JavaScript.
Alternatively, you should now use flexbox to achieve many of the layouts that you may previously have used inline-block for: https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/
Since this answer has become rather popular, I'm rewriting it significantly.
Let's not forget the actual question that was asked:
How to remove the space between inline-block elements? I was hoping
for a CSS solution that doesn't require the HTML source code to be
tampered with. Can this issue be solved with CSS alone?
It is possible to solve this problem with CSS alone, but there are no completely robust CSS fixes.
The solution I had in my initial answer was to add font-size: 0 to the parent element, and then declare a sensible font-size on the children.
http://jsfiddle.net/thirtydot/dGHFV/1361/
This works in recent versions of all modern browsers. It works in IE8. It does not work in Safari 5, but it does work in Safari 6. Safari 5 is nearly a dead browser (0.33%, August 2015).
Most of the possible issues with relative font sizes are not complicated to fix.
However, while this is a reasonable solution if you specifically need a CSS only fix, it's not what I recommend if you're free to change your HTML (as most of us are).
This is what I, as a reasonably experienced web developer, actually do to solve this problem:
<p>
<span>Foo</span><span>Bar</span>
</p>
Yes, that's right. I remove the whitespace in the HTML between the inline-block elements.
It's easy. It's simple. It works everywhere. It's the pragmatic solution.
You do sometimes have to carefully consider where whitespace will come from. Will appending another element with JavaScript add whitespace? No, not if you do it properly.
Let's go on a magical journey of different ways to remove the whitespace, with some new HTML:
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
You can do this, as I usually do:
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li><li>Item 2</li><li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
http://jsfiddle.net/thirtydot/dGHFV/1362/
Or, this:
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li
><li>Item 2</li
><li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
Or, use comments:
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li><!--
--><li>Item 2</li><!--
--><li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
Or, if you are using using PHP or similar:
<ul>
<li>Item 1</li><?
?><li>Item 2</li><?
?><li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
Or, you can even skip certain closing tags entirely (all browsers are fine with this):
<ul>
<li>Item 1
<li>Item 2
<li>Item 3
</ul>
Now that I've gone and bored you to death with "one thousand different ways to remove whitespace, by thirtydot", hopefully you've forgotten all about font-size: 0.
For CSS3 conforming browsers there is white-space-collapsing:discard
see: http://www.w3.org/TR/2010/WD-css3-text-20101005/#white-space-collapsing
Today, we should just use Flexbox.
OLD ANSWER:
OK, although I've upvoted both the font-size: 0; and the not implemented CSS3 feature answers,
after trying I found out that none of them is a real solution.
Actually, there is not even one workaround without strong side effects.
Then I decided to remove the spaces (this answers is about this argument) between the inline-block divs from my HTML source (JSP),
turning this:
<div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div>
<div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div>
to this
<div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div><div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div>
that is ugly, but working.
But, wait a minute... what if I'm generating my divs inside Taglibs loops (Struts2, JSTL, etc...) ?
For example:
<s:iterator begin="0" end="6" status="ctrDay">
<br/>
<s:iterator begin="0" end="23" status="ctrHour">
<s:push value="%{days[#ctrDay.index].hours[#ctrHour.index]}">
<div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div in a matrix
(Do something here with the pushed object...)
</div>
</s:push>
</s:iterator>
</s:iterator>
It is absolutely not thinkable to inline all that stuff, it would mean
<s:iterator begin="0" end="6" status="ctrDay">
<br/>
<s:iterator begin="0" end="23" status="ctrHour"><s:push value="%{days[#ctrDay.index].hours[#ctrHour.index]}"><div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div in a matrix
(Do something here with the pushed object...)
</div></s:push></s:iterator>
</s:iterator>
That is not readable, hard to maintain and understand, etc.
The solution I found:
use HTML comments to connect the end of one div to the begin of the next one!
<s:iterator begin="0" end="6" status="ctrDay">
<br/>
<s:iterator begin="0" end="23" status="ctrHour"><!--
--><s:push value="%{days[#ctrDay.index].hours[#ctrHour.index]}"><!--
--><div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div in a matrix
(Do something here with the pushed object...)
</div><!--
--></s:push><!--
--></s:iterator>
</s:iterator>
This way you will have a readable and correctly indented code.
And, as a positive side effect, the HTML source, although infested by empty comments,
will result correctly indented;
let's take the first example. In my humble opinion, this:
<div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div><!--
--><div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div>
is better than this:
<div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div><div class="inlineBlock">
I'm an inline-block div
</div>
Add display: flex; to the parent element. Here is the solution with a prefix:
Simplified version 👇
p {
display: flex;
}
span {
width: 100px;
background: tomato;
font-size: 30px;
color: white;
text-align: center;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span>
<span> Bar </span>
</p>
Fix with prefix 👇
p {
display: -webkit-box;
display: -webkit-flex;
display: -ms-flexbox;
display: flex;
}
span {
float: left;
display: inline-block;
width: 100px;
background: blue;
font-size: 30px;
color: white;
text-align: center;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span>
<span> Bar </span>
</p>
All the space elimination techniques for display:inline-block are nasty hacks...
Use Flexbox
It's awesome, solves all this inline-block layout bs, and as of 2017 has 98% browser support (more if you don't care about old IEs).
Are We Ready to Use Flexbox?
Using CSS flexible boxes - Web developer guide | MDN
A Complete Guide to Flexbox | CSS-Tricks
Flexy Boxes — CSS flexbox playground and code generation tool
Add comments between elements to NOT have a white space. For me it is easier than resetting font size to zero and then setting it back.
<div>
Element 1
</div><!--
--><div>
Element 2
</div>
This is the same answer I gave over on the related: Display: Inline block - What is that space?
There’s actually a really simple way to remove whitespace from inline-block that’s both easy and semantic. It’s called a custom font with zero-width spaces, which allows you to collapse the whitespace (added by the browser for inline elements when they're on separate lines) at the font level using a very tiny font. Once you declare the font, you just change the font-family on the container and back again on the children, and voila. Like this:
#font-face{
font-family: 'NoSpace';
src: url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.eot');
src: url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.woff') format('woff'),
url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.ttf') format('truetype'),
url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.svg#NoSpace') format('svg');
}
body {
font-face: 'OpenSans', sans-serif;
}
.inline-container {
font-face: 'NoSpace';
}
.inline-container > * {
display: inline-block;
font-face: 'OpenSans', sans-serif;
}
Suit to taste. Here’s a download to the font I just cooked up in font-forge and converted with FontSquirrel webfont generator. Took me all of 5 minutes. The css #font-face declaration is included: zipped zero-width space font. It's in Google Drive so you'll need to click File > Download to save it to your computer. You'll probably need to change the font paths as well if you copy the declaration to your main css file.
2021 Solution
Unfortunately white-space-collapse is still not implemented.
In the meantime, give the parent element font-size: 0; and set the font-size on the children. This should do the trick
Two more options based on CSS Text Module Level 3 (instead of white-space-collapsing:discard which had been dropped from the spec draft):
word-spacing: -100%;
In theory, it should do exactly what is needed — shorten whitespaces
between 'words' by the 100% of the space character width, i.e. to
zero. But seems not to work anywhere, unfortunately, and this
feature is marked 'at risk' (it can be dropped from the specification, too).
word-spacing: -1ch;
It shortens the inter-word spaces by the width of the digit '0'. In a monospace font it should be exactly equal to the width of the space character (and any other character as well). This works in Firefox 10+, Chrome 27+, and almost works in Internet Explorer 9+.
Fiddle
Use flexbox and do a fallback (from suggestions above) for older browsers:
ul {
display: -webkit-box;
display: -moz-box;
display: -ms-flexbox;
display: -webkit-flex;
display: flex;
}
Though, technically not an answer to the question:
"How do I remove the space between inline-block elements?"
You can try the flexbox solution and apply the code below and the space will be remove.
p {
display: flex;
flex-direction: row;
}
You can learn more about it on this link: https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/a-guide-to-flexbox/
Simple:
item {
display: inline-block;
margin-right: -0.25em;
}
There is no need to touch the parent element.
Only condition here: the item's font-size must not be defined (must be equal to parent's font-size).
0.25em is the default word-spacing
W3Schools - word-spacing property
font-size:0; can be a bit trickier to manage...
I think the following couple lines is a lot better and more re-usable, and time saver than any other methods. I personally use this:
.inline-block-wrapper>.inline-block-wrapper,
.inline-block-wrapper{letter-spacing: -4px;}
.inline-block-wrapper>*{letter-spacing: 0;display: inline-block;}
/* OR better shorter name...*/
.items>.items,
.items{letter-spacing: -4px;}
.items>*{letter-spacing: 0;display: inline-block;}
Then you can use it as following...
<ul class="items">
<li>Item 1</li>
<li>Item 2</li>
<li>Item 3</li>
</ul>
As far I as I know (I may be wrong) but all browsers support this method.
EXPLANATION:
This works (maybe -3px may be better) exactly as you would anticipate it to work.
you copy and paste the code (once)
then on your html just use class="items" on the parent of each inline-block.
You will NOT have the need to go back to the css, and add another css rule, for your new inline blocks.
Solving two issues at once.
Also note the > (greater than sign) this means that */all children should be inline-block.
http://jsfiddle.net/fD5u3/
NOTE: I have modified to accommodate to inherit letter-spacing when a wrapper has a child wrapper.
Generally we use elements like this in different lines, but in case of display:inline-block using tags in same line will remove the space, but in a different line will not.
An example with tags in a different line:
p span {
display: inline-block;
background: red;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span>
<span> Bar </span>
</p>
Example with tags in same line
p span {
display: inline-block;
background: red;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span><span> Bar </span>
</p>
Another efficient method is a CSS job that is using font-size:0 to the parent element and give font-size to a child element as much as you want.
p {
font-size: 0;
}
p span {
display: inline-block;
background: red;
font-size: 14px;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span>
<span> Bar </span>
</p>
The above methods may not work somewhere depending on the whole application, but the last method is a foolproof solution for this situation and can be used anywhere.
I'm not pretty sure if you want to make two blue spans without a gap or want to handle other white-space, but if you want to remove the gap:
span {
display: inline-block;
width: 100px;
background: blue;
font-size: 30px;
color: white;
text-align: center;
float: left;
}
And done.
I had this problem right now and from font-size:0; I've found that in Internet Explorer 7 the problem remains because Internet Explorer thinks "Font Size 0?!?! WTF are you crazy man?" - So, in my case I've Eric Meyer's CSS reset and with font-size:0.01em; I have a difference of 1 pixel from Internet Explorer 7 to Firefox 9, so, I think this can be a solution.
p {
display: flex;
}
span {
float: left;
display: inline-block;
width: 100px;
background: red;
font-size: 30px;
color: white;
}
<p>
<span> hello </span>
<span> world </span>
</p>
I’ve been tackling this recently and instead of setting the parent font-size:0 then setting the child back to a reasonable value, I’ve been getting consistent results by setting the parent container letter-spacing:-.25em then the child back to letter-spacing:normal.
In an alternate thread I saw a commenter mention that font-size:0 isn’t always ideal because people can control minimum font sizes in their browsers, completely negating the possibility of setting the font-size to zero.
Using ems appears to work regardless of whether the font-size specified is 100%, 15pt or 36px.
http://cdpn.io/dKIjo
I think there is a very simple/old method for this which is supported by all browsers even IE 6/7. We could simply set letter-spacing to a large negative value in parent and then set it back to normal at child elements:
body { font-size: 24px }
span { border: 1px solid #b0b0c0; } /* show borders to see spacing */
.no-spacing { letter-spacing: -1em; } /* could be a large negative value */
.no-spacing > * { letter-spacing: normal; } /* => back to normal spacing */
<p style="color:red">Wrong (default spacing):</p>
<div class="">
<span>Item-1</span>
<span>Item-2</span>
<span>Item-3</span>
</div>
<hr/>
<p style="color:green">Correct (no-spacing):</p>
<div class="no-spacing">
<span>Item-1</span>
<span>Item-2</span>
<span>Item-3</span>
</div>
The simplest answer to this question is to add.
css
float: left;
codepen link: http://jsfiddle.net/dGHFV/3560/
With PHP brackets:
ul li {
display: inline-block;
}
<ul>
<li>
<div>first</div>
</li><?
?><li>
<div>first</div>
</li><?
?><li>
<div>first</div>
</li>
</ul>
I'm going to expand on user5609829's answer a little bit as I believe the other solutions here are too complicated/too much work. Applying a margin-right: -4px to the inline block elements will remove the spacing and is supported by all browsers. See the updated fiddle here. For those concerned with using negative margins, try giving this a read.
The CSS Text Module Level 4 specification defines a text-space-collapse property, which allow to control the how white space inside and around an element is processed.
So, regarding your example, you would just have to write this:
p {
text-space-collapse: discard;
}
Unfortunately, no browser is implementing this property yet (as of September 2016) as mentioned in the comments to the answer of HBP.
I found a pure CSS solution that worked for me very well in all browsers:
span {
display: table-cell;
}
Add white-space: nowrap to the container element:
CSS:
* {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
.row {
vertical-align: top;
white-space: nowrap;
}
.column{
float: left;
display: inline-block;
width: 50% // Or whatever in your case
}
HTML:
<div class="row">
<div class="column"> Some stuff</div>
<div class="column">Some other stuff</div>
</div>
Here is the Plunker.
There are lots of solutions like font-size:0,word-spacing,margin-left,letter-spacing and so on.
Normally I prefer using letter-spacing because
it seems ok when we assign a value which is bigger than the width of extra space(e.g. -1em).
However, it won't be okay with word-spacing and margin-left when we set bigger value like -1em.
Using font-size is not convenient when we try to using em as font-size unit.
So, letter-spacing seems to be the best choice.
However, I have to warn you
when you using letter-spacing you had better using -0.3em or -0.31em not others.
* {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
a {
text-decoration: none;
color: inherit;
cursor: auto;
}
.nav {
width: 260px;
height: 100px;
background-color: pink;
color: white;
font-size: 20px;
letter-spacing: -1em;
}
.nav__text {
width: 90px;
height: 40px;
box-sizing: border-box;
border: 1px solid black;
line-height: 40px;
background-color: yellowgreen;
text-align: center;
display: inline-block;
letter-spacing: normal;
}
<nav class="nav">
<span class="nav__text">nav1</span>
<span class="nav__text">nav2</span>
<span class="nav__text">nav3</span>
</nav>
If you are using Chrome(test version 66.0.3359.139) or Opera(test version 53.0.2907.99), what you see might be:
If you are using Firefox(60.0.2),IE10 or Edge, what you see might be:
That's interesting. So, I checked the mdn-letter-spacing and found this:
length
Specifies extra inter-character space in addition to the default space between characters. Values may be negative, but there may be implementation-specific limits. User agents may not further increase or decrease the inter-character space in order to justify text.
It seems that this is the reason.
Add letter-spacing:-4px; on parent p css and add letter-spacing:0px; to your span css.
span {
display:inline-block;
width:100px;
background-color:palevioletred;
vertical-align:bottom;
letter-spacing:0px;
}
p {
letter-spacing:-4px;
}
<p>
<span> Foo </span>
<span> Bar </span>
</p>
I thought I'd add something new to this question as although many of the answers currently provided are more than adequate & relevant, there are some new CSS properties which can achieve a very clean output, with full support across all browsers, and little to no 'hacks'. This does move away from inline-block but it gives you the same results as the question asked for.
These CSS properties are grid
CSS Grid is highly supported (CanIUse) apart from IE which only needs an -ms- prefix to allow for it to work.
CSS Grid is also highly flexible, and takes all the good parts from table, flex, and inline-block elements and brings them into one place.
When creating a grid you can specify the gaps between the rows and columns. The default gap is already set to 0px but you can change this value to whatever you like.
To cut it a bit short, heres a relevant working example:
body {
background: lightblue;
font-family: sans-serif;
}
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 100px 100px;
grid-column-gap: 0; /* Not needed but useful for example */
grid-row-gap: 0; /* Not needed but useful for example */
}
.box {
background: red;
}
.box:nth-child(even) {
background: green;
}
<div class="container">
<div class="box">
Hello
</div>
<div class="box">
Test
</div>
</div>
Negative margin
You can scoot the elements back into place with negative 4px of margin (may need to be adjusted based on font size of parent). Apparently this is problematic in older IE (6 & 7), but if you don’t care about those browsers at least you can keep the code formatting clean.
span {
display: inline-block;
margin-right: -4px;
}
One another way I found is applying margin-left as negative values except the first element of the row.
span {
display:inline-block;
width:100px;
background:blue;
font-size:30px;
color:white;
text-align:center;
margin-left:-5px;
}
span:first-child{
margin:0px;
}

Fixed image within a div to make parallax scroll.

Okay. I have an issue with an image within a div. Fixed image within a div to make parallax scroll.
Here is what I want to do.
I have a div. Here is code.
#container{
height: 500px;
margin: 0 auto;
width: 100%;
max-width: 1920px;
position: relative;
overflow: hidden;
}
Now I want to add an image in there that is fixed.
#container-img{
position: absolute;
background-position:top center;
margin-right:0px;
bottom:0;
height: 500px;
margin: 0 auto;
width: 100%;
max-width: 1920px;
display-inline: block;
}
My problem is I want image fixed within the div and it goes all over the place. I do not want to add image via css as I have it in Wordpress for someone to change image when they want via dashboard. Here is HTML
<div id="container" >
<img id="container-img" src="<?php echo get_template_directory_uri(); ?>/images/home.jpg"/>
</div>
I want the css to make image fixed and not go outside the div? Any solutions? Thanks.
display-inline: block; is not a valid CSS. Try using display: block. Also background-position:top center; is not needed as you don't have any background image specified.
I would suggest you still use a background image with a background-size: cover; or you will have a hard time distorting the image proportions.
You will need to put the image in a inline style on your container:
<div id="container" style="background-image: url('<?php echo get_template_directory_uri(); ?>/images/home.jpg')">
Hope that helps.

Flexslider Slide Width Issue

I have a strange issue using flexslider. The Slide LIs don't get the correct width so that all slides are shown. This only occurs on first page load. As soon as I switch to another tab and switch back everything looks fine. Maybe a JS Loading Problem?!
Screenshot: here
flexslider.css
.flexslider {margin: 0; padding: 0;}
.flexslider .slides > li {text-align: center; display: none; -webkit-backface-visibility: hidden;} /* Hide the slides before the JS is loaded. Avoids image jumping */
.flexslider .slides li.flex-active-slide img {text-align:center; width: auto; -webkit-border-radius: 6px; -moz-border-radius: 6px; -o-border-radius: 6px; border-radius: 6px; box-shadow: 0 1px 4px rgba(0,0,0,.2); -webkit-box-shadow: 0 1px 4px rgba(0,0,0,.2); -moz-box-shadow: 0 1px 4px rgba(0,0,0,.2); -o-box-shadow: 0 1px 4px rgba(0,0,0,.2); }
JS
$(window).load(function() {
$('.flexslider').flexslider({
controlNav: true,
directionNav: true
});
});
I've tried it with $(document).ready(function() too, but still the same problem.
Any ideas?
Well, Werner.
I ended up with your solution. Unfortunately.
This is otherwise another way to do it.
/* SLIDERS in content */
$('.flexslider').flexslider({
animation: "slide",
start: function(slider){
$('.flexslider').resize();
}
});
The reason I chose not to use the above code is that there was a delay and made a little jump when the slides updated to the correct width.
If anyone has a cleaner solution - please tell me. I am using the latest flexslider there is - and this issue only seems to occur sometimes. But when it does... arghhh.
I had the same problem.
At first load in a session, Flexslider get the width of the slider container which, if it is not explicit, has value 0px.
Then slides have width 0px and you can't see them.
To avoid this problem is sufficient to fix a width in slider container, in my case 604px:
<div class="flexslider" style="width: 604px">
<ul class="slides">
<li>
<img id="slide1" />
</li>
<li>
<img id="slide2" />
</li>
</ul>
</div>
I faced the same issue with flexi slider.
Tried above mentioned solutions, but it didn't work for me.
I tried to updated css with following code as turn-around for this issue.
.flexslider .slides {
zoom: 1.1 !important;
}
It fixed the problem. You can try this code and let me know if it worked for you or not.
This code/order below may help; well at least I have had success with it.
<script src="js/jquery-1.8.3.min.js"></script>
<script src="js/jquery.easing.js"></script>
<script defer src="js/jquery.flexslider-min.js"></script>
<script>
$(document).ready(function(){
$('.flexslider').flexslider({
controlNav: true,
directionNav: true,
});
});
</script>
I resolved this issue by removing minItems in my flexslider call. Seems to work with maxItems though.
I found out why it was doing this, and it is pretty simple.
It is because of CSS!!! on the ul in the slider.
take off the paddings and the margins on the ul.slides
.slides{
padding:0;
margin:0;
}
after i did THIS the resizing worked perfect every time on all browsers and mobile.
For me, the problem was the markup. I had this:
<div class='carousel-slides'>
<div class='carousel-slide'></div>
<div class='carousel-slide'></div>
</div>
$('.carousel-slides', context).flexslider({
selector: '.carousel-slide'
});
... but it seemed that it needed to be applied to an inner div on each slide, which is ridiculous.
<div class='carousel-slides'>
<div class='carousel-slide'>
<div class='carousel-slide-inner'></div>
</div>
<div class='carousel-slide'>
<div class='carousel-slide-inner'></div>
</div>
</div>
$('.carousel-slides', context).flexslider({
selector: '.carousel-slide > .carousel-slide-inner'
});
Maybe it's a bit late for another answer, but after trying all the answers here and in other forums, I ended up with my own solution, similar to others, but at least I find it pretty coherent and clean.
I had the problem in mobile environment, where the slider is inside a tab that is opened as soon one clicks on the title. The content was in display:none, and this causes the problem to flexslider (v. 2.5), that is not able to determine the correct width of the contained slides.
So i corrected my css and put the container hidden by playng with visibility and opacity.
Html sampl
<dd class="tab-container with-slider">
<div class="flexslider">
<ul class="slides">
<li>whatever </li>
</ul>
</div>
</dd>
Css:
/*all other containers behave well with display none/block so I leave them with normal behavior*/
.parent dd.tab-container {
display: none; position: relative;
}
/*container with flexslider inside uses visibility and opacity to be hidden*/
.parent dd.tab-container.with-slider{
display: block;
height: 0px;
visibility: hidden;
opacity: 0;
}
.parent.accordion-open dd.tab-container.with-slider{
height: auto;
visibility: visible;
opacity: 1;
}
Js is straighforward from the basic example, nothing more.
$j('.myTabOpener').click(function () {
var mySlider = $j(this).find('.flexslider');
mySlider.flexslider({
animation: "slide",
animationLoop: false,
itemWidth: 210,
itemMargin: 5,
minItems: getGridSize(),
maxItems: getGridSize()
});
});

CSS: issue with background color

I want to make the header and footer backgrounds to be repeated on x. So it takes all the width size of any page resolution.
This is how I want it to look like:
An this how is being displayed:
I'm using the 960 gs, every div is limited to 960px. Is there a way to expand the color of the div through x?
See the project here:
http://gabrielmeono.com/yonature/
yes there is
you have to split the page into 3 parts: header, body, footer
what we're gonna do is create divs with a little bit of CSS. we will have a div that goes all the way to the sides of the website, and a div which is centered.
i'll show you how to do it for the header, and you make the same thing for body/footer:
<html>
<head>
<style type="text/css">
html{}
body { margin: 0px; width: 100%; }
#headerCenter { float: left; width: 100%; text-align: center; color: #00AA00; height: 120px; }
#headerContainer { margin: 0 auto; width: 960px; }
#header { width: 100%; float: left; height: 120px; }
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="headerCenter">
<div id="headerContainer">
<div id="header">HEADER</div>
</div>
</div>
.. same for body/footer....
</body>
</html>
so the trick is:
a div (#headerCenter) which goes all the way across the page. we will define height for it, paint it's background, and set 'text-align: center;'
inside we put a div with 'margin: 0 auto;' and the desired width. NO FLOAT on this div! this will create a div with height 0, placed in the center of the parent div.
inside we put the header. we can set float left etc... width can be 100% (or 960px)
repeat this for body and for footer
another method btw is using HTML tables, which i don't like to use for layouts.
if you have any trouble setting this up, let me know and i'll do the layout for you

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