I'm currently working on a project and I'm interested in having a sort of "elevator pitch carousel", a feature as seen on websites like www.salesforce.com. I took a look at their source code, but I'm relatively new to HTML and CSS editing I'm pretty confused as to how to go about this.
I don't want something that is exactly as salesforces, but just generally a way how to make text in a text box change after a person presses particular heading option on the top of the text box.
Hey you can accomplish this using javascript tabs. Bootstrap has some pretty simple ones to implement and there are other jquery plugins that would do the basic thing. You will need to edit the css to get the appearance you want here is a link to bootstrap 3 and their tabs feature.
http://getbootstrap.com/javascript/#tabs
some other tabs plugins
http://www.unheap.com/?s=tabs
hope that helps
-John
Related
Website builder name: Dynadot not Wordspace SO I CANNOT MAKE A CHILD THEME
I want css code for my website P.S The website has prebuilt themes and we can basically customize text, change pictures, add products etc. The website also provides a CSS editor like square space does. I have been to so many websites to try to copy some code but not a success. I have no experience with it either. Here is some information that might be useful.Also, the first pictures has drag and drop options like i can drag VIDEO to a certain part Here is a example website: https://www.svpartners.com/ I don't want the image animation it already has i need some new ideas on how to customize it with CSS, Font for the website Open sans
The screenshot 1 shows how my website theme already looks also at the bottom left there is a code option and there is a screen shot #2 for it so it might be helpful. Again I have tried many sites but most ask for money and most are not helpful. ALSO a GIF so you can have a better view😁 please help me out thanks
THE GIF
I am new here, I don't know how this works! Just ignore the writing if it'd not good, Also comment if you need any more details
This "image slider? thing. What is it called?
If you go to myanimelist.net, there is this very nice and simple image slider and upon clicking it, it redirects you to the specific anime details page according to what you clicked. What is this widget called and where can I learn to create something like this?
A beginner programmer that wants to create a website but no idea how to start.
The page uses css mostly. if you are really starting and want to learn try with JQuery is a Java framework with "widgets" like you call them.
a duplicate of what you need is here: https://www.jqueryscript.net/demo/Fully-Responsive-Flexible-jQuery-Carousel-Plugin-slick/
This is image slider or carousel slider. You can make it easy by using bootstrap 4 carousels. Bootstrap is very easy to learn and for image slider, you don't need to learn Jquery. Here is a link which will help you to make carousal Bootstrap Carousel
If you wanna use direct code then you can check this link Jassor Image slider
This is called a Carousel or Slider. You should be able to create this with just HTML and CSS and a tad bit of JavaScript. I first learnt building one by going through this link in W3C. When I got older and experienced I stopped building one from scratch for every project, instead started using Bootstrap Carousel. A good resource to learn this is from here.
Hi Experts
My question is :
how we can achieve UI as shown in above image using angular-material?
if it is not possible using angular-material then which framework I can use
The Tabs for FLight, Hotel, Buses, Holiday this kind of tab using icon and text with transparent background.
the search text boxes using autocomplete.
I am using angularJs and angular-material.
Any Help would be a great support.. Thanks
All the basic components you mentioned are available in angular material:
Auto-complete
Tabs
You have also a lot of icons But i suggest you though to use FontAwesome
However for other things you asked, you have to absolutely learn css since no any framework can visually fit to your design choices.
I'm currently teaching myself to create websites - this particular site is for a that business I have. I'm using Dreamweaver CS3 to do so.
I need some help with the horizontal navigation menu I am trying to create. I have three main categories within my website, each with their own small image to represent them. I want to have all three images, side by side underneath my company logo, acting as the navigational menu.
So for example, one section is Alcohol. When the user puts their mouse over the 'alcohol' image, a menu drops down underneath to show the subsections eg spirits, beer etc.
After doing some research, I can't quite decide the best way to do this. Whilst learning Dreamweaver, I have come across Spry Menus, which I thought would do the job. But I have also now learned about pop-up menus in Fireworks CS3 (which I also have available to me).
I'm really looking for some other opinions on the matter and would appreciate any recommendations about the best route to take with this.
Thanks.
I would prefer learning CSS menus instead of having it generated using Dreamweaver. You can try the this one.
I would learn pure CSS menus, and then for more advanced functionality, use jQuery plugins like Superfish
The site I first learned CSS menus from was CSSplay. This same guy also has a newer site aimed only at CSS menus.
I would say going though the source code of some of those will teach you a lot, but ultimately I would recommend using Superfish or some other jQuery plugin for more user-friendly menus, especially for delay on mouseout. A lack of mouseout delay can render most CSS menus completely unusable.
Give http://www.alistapart.com/ a try. Wonderful page with a lot of good tutorials. http://www.alistapart.com/articles/horizdropdowns/ for example shows you how to use a list and css to build a horizontal menu. Maybe a good starting point for you project.
Dreamweaver is really a good tool for getting fast results. But if you are interested in learning implementing websites than it is better to get your hands dirty. Take for example the tutorials from http://www.w3schools.com/ and a good editor of your choice and build your website or a fun project from the scratch. On the long run this investment will pay of.
First, don't use snippets built in dreamweaver. They are awful.
Use JavaScript, maybe even JS framework like jQuery. It offers toggle() function for that kind of situations.
In general, you should apply JS function to mouseover of your image. That function shows or hides div (your dropdown). You can achieve that by setting css parameter display: none (hidden) or display: block (visible).
Example for showing div:
My menu 1
<div id="menu-1">
<ul>
<li>Alcohol</li>
<li>Spirit</li>
</ul>
</div>
And some javascript:
function show(myid)
{
document.getElementById(myid).style.display = "block";
}
function hide(myid)
{
document.getElementById(myid).style.display = "none";
}
I made that in a hurry so it's not perfect.
The discussion on this answer to the question "How can I use Google's new imageless button?" Has prompted this question.
Google seems to think that going imageless is good for some reason, but from the comments cited, I fail to see the advantage. Is it worth it to send dozens of lines of HTML and who knows how much CSS to render these imageless buttons, rather than simply load another image, especially when techniques like CSS sprites are available?
When would this technique be preferred? The other question asks how it can be done, but I want to know why it should be done.
Localization (it's easier to translate text than images)
Skinning/themeing (it's easier to change the look and feel with single CSS than recreate multiple images)
Accessibility (screen readers can read properly, text scaling works properly)
Performance (the CSS is shared and so is loaded once from the server)
Functionality (it's easier to expand the button with new UX elements like dropdown arrow when you don't have to change the whole picture)
Btw, the "imageless" button might as well contain an image inside the visual template. This approach is quite similar to XAML's approach to templating and styling the visual tree.
I think in this specific case I can only see the advantage that the buttons can be programatically generated. If you don't know what your button will say it's probably easy to make this way than generating it using somekind of image library generator.
Also changing one CSS can make you change the look-and-feel of all buttons at once. Using image buttons you'll need to update everyone and each of images.
Isn't this done because the height of the button may vary (for example the text size)?
The page load is smoother as no images have to be loaded and will appear later than the rest
The button text is also readable in the case somebody cannot read/view images, yet you have the graphical look. (building a graphical button with images in the traditional way around real text is as complicated HTML as this method)
As they mentioned in their blog, these buttons are skinnable without creating and storing custom images.
Basically, you get all the advantages of plain text buttons over custom imaging, while still having a nice, skinnable graphical look.