Update: Plnkr available here to demonstrate: http://plnkr.co/edit/i6ngfaMgSE0XGZq3VuBW?p=preview (although you need to widen the "preview" window so that the responsive stuff doesn't kick in.
So I'm trying to use Twitter Bootstrap's thumbnails and thumbnail classes to produce an image-gallery type effect, however I'm having trouble trying to get the images to all align properly.
All the thumbnails being retrieved from the server are scaled uniformly so that they fit in a 200px X 200px image. However, sometimes they are much wider than tall (200px X 100px) and vice-versa (100px X 200px). What I want is to have all my images vertically and horizontally centred within the row they are on. So for example in this:
I'd like testImage, testImage2 and testImage3 to be moved down in their containers so that the tags all lined up.
Here's the HTML (with some AngularJS bindings):
<div class="container" ng-controller="StaticDataManagementCtrl">
<div class="row">
<div class="span12">
<tabset>
<tab heading="Text" select="loadTextLibrary()">
<div class="row"></div>
</tab>
<tab heading="Images" select="loadImageLibrary()">
<div class="row-fluid">
<ul class="thumbnails">
<li class="span3" ng-repeat="image in staticImages">
<div class="thumbnail">
<img ng-src="/api/static/images/{{image._id}}/thumb">
<h3>{{image.name}}</h3>
<p>Some sample description</p>
</div>
</li>
</ul>
</div>
</tab>
<tab heading="Health Mark" select="loadHealthMarkLibrary()"></tab>
</tabset>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Try to do with following css:
.thumbnail{
vertical-align: middle !important;
}
This answer should help. Basically you have to fix the height of the text and images. Bootstrap has an .img-responsive that will help with scaling, and don't forget overflow:hidden.
Related
I'm working on a really simple Html/Bootstrap website.
I'm using owl-carousel library to display and slide multiple paragraphs.
The problem is that when displaying on small devices, these paragraphs will not have the same height, depending on how long they are.
I would like all my owl-item div or paragraph to be aligned vertically within the owl-wrapper div. I tried few display combinations, and also the owl carousel's autoHeight: true option but it does not work as I except.
See the pictures, the little paragraph is displayed on the top of the owl-wrapper div, but I would like it to be centered vertically:
<div class="container">
<div class="caption text-center text-white" data-stellar-ratio="0.7">
<div id="owl-intro-text" class="owl-carousel">
<div class="item">
<h1>Oscar Götting</h1>
</div>
<div class="item">
<h1>Let's build something together</h1>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Add this to your CSS
.owl-carousel .owl-stage { display: flex; align-items: center; }
I am trying to make a responsive website. My issue is if i am not setting a div height then the bottom of the div content has come up and overlay with the top div contents. Also if I sets a height, when i see it in responsive it takes the full height and show white space. Can you guys please sort it out?
You want something like this:
<div style="height:20%"> CONTENT </div>
or
<div style="height:40px"> CONTENT </div>
use % to specify the amount of space your div will get in your current container or px for the number of pixels
http://www.w3schools.com/cssref/pr_dim_height.asp
Friends, this is my sample coding
<div class="row clearfix">
<div class="left-banner">
<img src="" alt="">
</div>
<div class="right-banner">
<img src="" alt="">
</div>
</div>
<div class="container">
<p></p>
</div>
CSS part:
.row{width:100%;}
.left-banner{float:left; width:60%;}
.right-banner{float:right; width:40%; display:none;}
.container{width:100%;}
For mobile responsive, I want to hide the right banner div so I did 'display: none;' but the container div came up and overlay with the row div. I just want to hide the right banner without any affect of other divs.
I want an image to stay exactly on the left side of the screen(fix it to the left side). I want the image to "start" from the screen's side. I managed to do this with
position:fixed; left: -15px;
and it works from the viewpoint of the image, it starts at the screen's left side exactly on every screen I tested.
BUT it ruins other things, namely the text on the same row will be on top of the picture, AND if I decrease the windows/screen size it will become more of a mess with the text.
What's a better solution?
My code:
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3" id="swoosh">
<img class="img-responsive" src="img/img1.png">
</div>
<div class="col-md-6">
<h1>Title of the website</h1>
<p class="lead">Use this document as a way to quickly start any new project.<br> All you get is this text and a mostly barebones HTML document.</p>
</div>
<div class="col-md-3">
<img class="img-responsive" src="img/logo.png">
</div>
</div>
I want the first picture, so img1.png to be on the left, the title should be in the middle, and the logo.png on the right. The second image, the logo.png doesn't need to be fixed to the right, just img1 to the left.
I tried to provide the all the info you need, but I'm new here so please tell me if there's anything more you need!
Thank you in advance!
EDIT: Added fiddles.
As you can see, the black image does not start at the screen's left side exactly here:
http://www.bootply.com/bGJhH27MQO
The next fiddle shows you how the black image should be positioned, but it ruins the site:
http://www.bootply.com/sFeKODGOSq
Actually, your html almost works. As you found out, using a fixed position within Bootstrap's grid system doesn't work very well.
Rather than trying to fix the <div> to the left edge, you should try fixing the image to the left edge. You don't need to use absolute positioning to do it. You can use a negative margin-left value to shift the image to the left. See updated code below
#swoosh {
margin-left: -15px;
}
<div class='container-fluid'>
<div class="row outerDiv">
<div class="col-xs-3 col-md-2 imageDiv" >
<img class="img-responsive" id="swoosh" ...
The actual value of the margin-left value is a little fuzzy. The value of -15px is to offset the padding-left value in the Bootstrap's col-xxxx classes. You will need to adjust the the value to meet your needs.
I've created a working version at JSBin
Okay, you have the row element within a container - so unless you use negative margins you won't be able to move the element the whole way across. You could place that row within a container-fluid element which will remove the restrictions on the location but it would stretch the element the whole width of the screen
<div class="container">
<div class="navbar navbar-default">
<p>Navbar Code Here</p>
</div>
</div><!-- /.container -->
<div class="container-fluid">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-md-3" id="swoosh">
<img class="img-responsive" src="http://vignette3.wikia.nocookie.net/uncyclopedia/images/7/71/Black.png">
</div>
<div class="col-md-6">
<h1>Title of the website</h1>
<p class="lead">Use this document as a way to quickly start any new project.<br> All you get is this text and a mostly barebones HTML document.</p>
</div>
<div class="col-md-3">
<img class="img-responsive" src="http://globe-views.com/dcim/dreams/red/red-01.jpg">
</div>
</div>
</div><!-- /.container-fluid -->
You can then remove the padding on that left image by applying
#swoosh {padding-left: 0;}
to your css.
If you need to change the alignment of the columns in responsive views, you should start taking a look at http://getbootstrap.com/css/#grid-example-mixed-complete to change the layout at the viewport reduces - perhaps using col-xs-6 etc to achieve the alignment you are after
I'm building a website which will list some buildings for sale with a picture and a small description. Since I want the website to be responsive I'm trying to use the Bootstrap3 grid system.
So the current html I have is as follows (running code here on bootply):
<div class="container">
<div class="row">
<div class="col-sm-8">
<article class="row property-ad">
<div class="col-sm-4">
<img class="property-thumbnail" src="https://uwaterloo.ca/pharmacy/sites/ca.pharmacy/files/uploads/images/pharmacy-building-street-view.jpg">
</div>
<div class="col-sm-8">
<div class="property-ad-title">Nice building</div>
<div class="property-ad-description">and some describing text here</div>
</div>
</article>
</div>
<div class="col-sm-4">
<div class="right-side-ad">
some advertisement is going here
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
The problem is that the title and description are only displayed correctly on a large (lg) screen. On an md or sm screen however, the title and description are partly displayed on top of the image because the image appears larger than its container. I tried giving the image a max-width: inherit;, but that doesn't seem to do anything.
Next to the fact that I don't know how to give it a proper max-width, the main problem seems to be that I don't really know what behaviour I would want. Because if the image resizes its width, it would either get distorted, or it would also need to change its heigth. If the height changes however, the text next to it could get a larger height than the image, which would also make the layout look messy.
So my main questions;
What is the typical desired behaviour to make a website responsive when working with images that are next to text?
How would I implement that?
All tips are welcome!
Don't use your custome class for the img just add the bootstrap class for responsive images
img-responsive
<div class="col-sm-4">
<img class="img-responsive" src=".....jpg">
</div>
Check this Bootply
Simply stated: Bootstrap has the img-responsive class, or you could set max-width: 100% to the img tag.
I have a problem with the Grid System of Bootstrap 2.
I want to make a header with some text, and an image on the right of it.
Therefore I made a row, and put a span8 and a span4 inside of it.
However, when the window gets too small for the content to be displayed side by side, I want the span4 div to come before the span8 div.
<div class="hero-unit">
<div class="container">
<div class="row">
<div class="span8">
This is some text
</div>
<div class="span4">
<img src="image.png" alt="" />
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
How can I do this?
So in other words, how can I change the order of the divs.
If I'm not completely mistaking, there is no such thing described in the documentation.
You can do it with media queries and floats.
Should look somewhat like this:
<div class="span4 pull-right"><!-- Image here --></div>
<div class="span8"><!-- Text here --></div>
Now you should use a media query (as seen in the responsive.less file) to switch when the screen size jumps below a specific mark. Then you make sure that the span4's float is removed. You might need to use .row-fluid instead of the usual .row and use your own padding to make it look great.