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I'm using this Sass to style a header on some static pages, but the background image doesn't show up. I'm pretty sure I've got the relative file path right (the stylesheet is in a stylesheets folder and the image is an images folder, both in an assets folder). What else might be causing this?
.blue_section_header
width: 900px
height: 80px
font-size: 30px
font-weight: 700
padding: 25px 0 0 40px
color: #fff
background: #54a0ce url(../images/section_header.png)
-webkit-border-radius: 4px
-moz-border-radius: 4px
border-radius: 4px
In Chrome:
1) Open Developer Tools
2) Click the Resources tab at the top
3) Open the Frames folder
4) Look for the Images folder and open it
Do you see your image in the Images folder? If you don't see the image that means that your relative path is incorrect.
You are missing a few things.
You miss the opening and closing brackets ({, }).
And the semi-colon behind every line.
It should be :
.blue_section_header {
width: 900px;
height: 80px;
font-size: 30px;
font-weight: 700;
padding: 25px 0 0 40px;
color: #fff;
background: #54a0ce url(../images/section_header.png);
-webkit-border-radius: 4px;
-moz-border-radius: 4px;
border-radius: 4px;
}
Related
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Screenshot
Hello everyone,
I need your help to fix this interesting white space. Why does it look this?
You are seeing a sort of edge effect where the system is struggling to match part CSS pixels to the multiple screen pixels that make up one CSS pixel on modern displays.
If you put a background to the video the same coloring as the border it will 'fill up' the little gap.
background-color: rgba(255, 181, 147, 0.814);
Set the border-width to an even number, so instead of this:
#video_1 {
/* ... */
border-radius: 15px;
border-style: solid;
border-width: 5px;
/* ... */
}
Instead use something like 4px instead of 5px:
#video_1 {
/* ... */
border-radius: 15px;
border-style: solid;
/* like this */
border-width: 4px;
/* ... */
}
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I have the following css code for drawing a circle on a page.
.full-circle {
background-color: rgba(204, 0, 102, 0);
border: 3px solid #333;
margin: auto;
height: 75px;
width: 75px;
-moz-border-radius:75px;
-webkit-border-radius: 75px;
}
It is called by:
<div class="full-circle">
Works fine in Firefox but when I run it in IE it appears as a square and i'm not sure why.
Marvin pointed it out in the comments, but it is the answer to your problem: you have not specified the normal border-radius. Furthermore, if you're looking to create a circle, you want 50%, not 75px. 75px may make your particular div a circle, but if you decide to make the width wider, it will render differently. Your CSS should look like this:
.full-circle {
background-color: rgba(204, 0, 102, 0);
border: 3px solid #333;
margin: auto;
height: 75px;
width: 75px;
border-radius:50%;
}
EDIT: As Rob pointed out, you probably don't even need the -moz and -webkit prefixes unless you are designing a website for a user-base you know uses older browsers. I removed them from the example.
As noted in the comments by Rob, most browsers have had no need for vendor prefixes since 2010, just add
border-radius: 75px;
IE8 did not support this property, IE9 supported it without the -ms- prefix.
But check out #Vector's answer, you should really be using % and not px
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I have the next style for div:
.page {
width: 90%;
border-color: orange;
border-style: double;
border-width: 25px 30px 10px 20px;
border-image: url("images/border-image.png") 25 30 10 20 repeat;
margin: 70px auto 0px auto;
padding: 10px;
box-shadow: 0px 4px 3px rgba(0,0,0,0.9),
0px 8px 13px rgba(0,0,0,0.6),
0px 18px 23px rgba(0,0,0,0.1);;
}
I took it from example. And there is right all! But me it draws only frame of image and black background (body has black background). How can I draw middle part of images too?
Per https://drafts.csswg.org/css-backgrounds/#the-border-image-slice, the middle is automatically discarded (because it's a "border" image) unless you specify the fill keyword. So you want:
border-image: url("images/border-image.png") 25 30 10 20 fill repeat;
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I want to use beautifull page navigation. When I downloaded below version:
http://codeb.it/resmenu/
I found file index.htm. In that file navigation is white. I tried use css style from orginal page (foundation.css) but this file have the same class like boostrap.
Please help me, I want to use this navigation (http://codeb.it/resmenu/) in black color.
I know, maybe it is easy question but please help me.
Thanks
Have you read all the documentation from the page you provided?
At the end of it, there is a snippet which shows you how to style the navigation bar:
.responsive_menu select {
display: block;
width: 100%;
height: 36px;
padding: 6px 12px;
font-size: 14px;
line-height: 1.42857;
color: rgb(85, 85, 85);
vertical-align: middle;
background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); /* This is black */
background-image: none;
border: none;
}
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I'm not sure if I should be using overflow or something else to fix this, but would appreciate any help I could get.
Scroll to the very bottom of the page. You will see at the very bottom where there's the black div and right below that is a little white space.
How can make that white space become black and still keep the rounded corners?
You have to set your padding-bottom to 0, and set the border radius bottom to the right and the left of the s-in-mid div.
Set bottom padding of .s-inn-mid to 0
Add bottom left and right border-radius 5px to the black div.
border-radius: 0 0 5px 5px
I'd tell you it exactly in terms of classes and ids, but you are using inline styles (GROSS), so that's unfortunately not possible.
Change this:
.s-inn-mid {
padding: 7px 0px 6px 0px;
...
to this:
.s-inn-mid {
padding: 7px 0px 0px 0px;
...
FYI, this has nothing to do with overflow. You simply had padding on the bottom of your container div.
in signup.css line 293 change #fff to #000, as below, tested in chrome.
.s-inn-mid {
width: 1000px;
margin: 0;
padding: 7px 0px 6px 0px;
float: left;
background: none repeat scroll 0 0 #000;
border: 1px solid #CCCCCC;
box-shadow: 0 0 2px rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.1);
border-radius: 5px;
-moz-border-radius: 5px;
-webkit-border-radius: 5px;
}