I have a question about a slider that I need to make with Bootstrap 3.3.1. I would like to make an image slider with texts and 3 buttons hovering and centered over those images. So far so good, the tricky part is that I would like the text and buttons to remain still as the images slides (if that makes sence?) because the text is basically the same for the most part.
There is just a little part of the text that actually needs to be changed with the image/slide.
Exemple: The moon is red (red image behind), The moon is blue (blue image behind) (Only the word "red" and "blue" changes in that sentence but the rest doesn't fade or swipe with the image.)
How can I make this possible? and responsive.
Thank you,
I'm running out of ideas.
Link to the folder
there are so many JQuery files and JS that I thought it would be easier to share the folder.
Related
I have built a simple website which includes a parallax image gallery with accompanying text descriptions for each image. The gallery is underlaid with a simple repeating pattern wallpaper.
The images have no margin between them. Their borders are covered by the text box which has a higher z-index, and the discrepancy between the scroll speed of the images and texts creates the parallax effect.
I would like to allow the background wallpaper (bottom layer) to also be the background of the textbox but to achieve this, I would need to make the middle layer (the image) transparent where it is obscured by the text box.
I have no idea where to start with this - I suspect my best bet is to just ignore this problem remove the wallpaper altogether but perhaps there is a straightforward answer to this issue?
The included image has a semi-transparent text-box and borders to give an idea of the layout and the problem I'm facing. Would appreciate any ideas. thanks
Link to the image
I am usually a back-end developer that tries to become fullstack and I came to a little problem.
What I want to do is have a button that on click slides to the other side and changes the background. I am familiar with how to make an event on click and actually change the background. My problem is how to make the CSS so it looks good.
Lets say I have black and white themes. I want to have a box with white and black sides. When I click on it I want one of the sides to shift.
Here is how I want it to look.
The idea is to click on the box and the black part to move. Basically the white part is the background and the black part is the button that slides with some animation. Then the black part switches its color to opposite of the current background.
Basically the colors just swap but with cool sliding animation.
I know that I need one div for the box with background the current background.
I also know that I need another div to be the actual part that moves with background opposite of the current one.The inner dif will have a button inside of it that on click will call the function that changes the background.
What I can do so far is
<div class="box">
<div class="slider">
<button onClick="changeBackGroundColor()"></button>
</div>
</div>
The slider div will have half the width of box and full height of box.
Now comes the tricky part - how can I add if in css so that I can always check what is the current background and make the background of slider the opposite of the current one?
Also - how can I make it slide to the border of the box? I need to make the sliding in both directions. From right to left when the theme is white and from left to write when its black.
It's kind of hard to explain, but I want to make a website with a picture as the background, and over the picture a grey overlay. I then want to have some text above the overlay, and where the text is, the grey overlay is removed, so the text is written in the absence of the grey overlay.
I made an example a year ago, with images, but I want to make it in CSS, if it's possible.
Here's the example (sorry for the mess, didn't really know what I was doing back then)
Example Page
Specifically, the text furthest down (most visible) on the page.
I really hope something like this is possible without using images as the text.
Thanks in advance!
This is not possible with CSS. You can do it with SVG though:
Text with image background in svg or css
I have the following
image as a powerpoint flow chart (text with hyperlinks not shown).
I want to turn this chart into an html-website.
Any ideas how to get a good result for this task?
I think recreating this with coding in html is troublesome.
Thank you.
Text on gray backgrounds (5 on right, 2 on left) are probably headings of the same level so they would be hN floating on the right and coming before each set of arrows.
Each individual set of arrows can be fairly easily coded as lists and styled as these breadcrumbs:
Simple scalable CSS based breadcrumbs (by Veerle Pieters)
Breadcrumb Navigation with CSS Triangles (by Chris Coyer)
They can expand with content if it seldomly occupies 2 lines (Firefox/Ubuntu and Safari/Mac have laaarge fonts, don't assume that your text will always stay on 1 line. Not speaking of zoom text that should be taken into account)
As for orange arrows between individual series ... that's complicated enough without HTML so it depends of context I believe. Is this an industrial process, webmarketing or else? To make it accessible, I'd use HTML images with alternative text trying to describe relationship.
Red arrows could be anchor links, probably.
I Think this image can be optimized pretty good, as it doesn't have a very complicated graphic. Therefore an easy solution can be just including it as an background image and then you can set the text and links into place using css.
A better solution is to break the picture into smaller components, then this way you can define "div" s with the background-color, border, and border-radios as the gray parts, and set the white elements as the background-image of "a" tag... However for the arrows I think you should include them as background-image...
Hope this helped...
I'm a person that learns best from example. Currently, I'm diving into the field of Web Development after fifteen years of developing desktop apps. I'm still getting used to all the web technologies used for developing modern web sites and everywhere I look, I see cool little UI elements and question how they're implemented. So I thought I'd ask you, the web experts...the wexperts :)
What are some straight forward or creative ways you could code this grid-breaking arrow...
The basic layout for this page looks like...
What would the html/css code look like?
Would you split the image into multiple images or could you use a single image?
I'm sure this is a really simple concept and it completely boggles me. I'm sorry if this is a strange question, remember I'm a noob! :)
Thanks in advance for all your help!
Here's a link to the original tutorial where I found these images
If you look at your mockup the Header Panel includes the height from the top of the green box to the bottom of the box.
background: green url(images/header-bottom.jpg) no-repeat bottom left;
That jpg file includes that last 70 of so pixels in height including the whole arrow. Since your header and navigation are below where that arrow goes the containers will be exactly how you show it.
This also enables you to have Submenu and Content to just have background colors since the only gradient you seem to have in those two regions are in the same zone as the arrow in Header Panel.
You could make a rectangle image which is wide and short to handle it. Use the same colors as the rest of the page so that it blends in. Check it in all browsers to make sure the image renders the same as the html colors. With some image formats this is not the case at least in some browsers.
There are so many ways to do this... there are two or three ways that are better than most.
Here is an image of what Ballsacian and Sean are talking about. Ignore the black bits of the top of text on the bottom, imprecise screenshot taking on my part.
alt text http://img171.imageshack.us/img171/9392/picture6e.png
You can make the green part of the arrow transparent and save it as a gif or png, since the slope appears to be 45 degrees (no jaggies in GIF). You would still have to edit the image to match the subnav and content background colors if you ever change them, but the transparent triangle will automatically show the header background color through.
You would also have to remove the margins between the header, subnav, and content containers.
The Photoshop guy who made this clearly wanted the background to show through "naturally" by making the margins between the header and subnav/content, but that is impossible without un-semantic markup with the arrow. The way you could do this without even using CSS is to just put the image in right after the header, in between the header and subnav/content.
<header>
<img src="arrow.gif" />
<section class="subnav" />
<section class="content" />
Then make the line be transparent instead of the arrow. Now you would have to change the image if you ever changed the header, subnav, or content background-colors, but not the body background-color. This accomplishes what the Photoshop guy wanted in spirit, but is ultimately not as satisfying markup wise.
I can see that this concept is very awesome in photoshop, you only have to change the background colors of each of the sections and transparency takes care of the rest, cool! If you were confused as to how to do this and keep the Photoshop guy's concept true to itself, I don't blame you. It is impossible to do with basic HTML and CSS with images. Maybe with SVG you can do it.
For fun, here is the super-optimized sprite way of doing it. This requires you to put in a huge vertical transparent space between the arrow and the content top gradient. Then use this background on the UL of the subnav and the div/section of the content container. Set the background-position to 0 -(verticalspace + arrowheight) and repeat-x for the content. 3k single http request.
alt text http://img37.imageshack.us/img37/8503/arrowy.gif