Enlarge select row height - html

I'm making a touch interface and need to enlarge the select form (In order to make the rows eaiser to hit with the clumpsy finger). Is there any other way of enlarging the select rows without enlarging the text font? I know that the select is very limited, and you might suggest using a diffrent approach. I'm aware of that. I'm just curious if there are a way to enlarge the row without enlarging the font text. =)
On the image below I have
font-size: 20px;
And I would prefer it to be around 14-16, but then the rows would be rather hard to hit on a touch screen.
Full css code of the dropdown menu below
.styledDropDown select{
background: transparent;
width: 200px;
padding: 5px;
font-size: 20px;
border: 0px;
height: 31px;
-webkit-appearance: none;
outline: none;
}
.styledDropDown{
float:right;
width: 200px;
height: 31px;
background:url(../images/bedview/dropDown.png) no-repeat;
}
Could only change background color and font color but not change padding
option {
background-color:#ddd; /*Works*/
margin:20px; /*don't work*/
padding:20px; /*Don't work*/
}
Edit it works in Internet Explorer but want it to work in chrome :/

Well if you only need it for chrome
You can try something like
http://jsfiddle.net/nyd69/3/
Obviously it's not the best result but this i the best I got
select {
padding: 10px;
font-size: 30px;
-webkit-appearance: button;
}

As far as I know, Chrome doesn't support giving styles to option. Sorry.

I'm using <select> and it's OK.
Try to modify width and height in CSS to see changes.
I have tested in FF but not Chrome.
Can you check this fiddle link if it's OK or not?
Thanks.

Related

How to change Primefaces rating tag's icon?

I use a p:rating tag like this.
<p:rating id="ratingID" value="#{manageBean.clientDetails.level}" styleClass="rating"/>
I want to change the image instead of star. I surfed google and got the below code.
.rating .ui-rating-star a, .ui-rating-cancel a {
background-image:url(../Images/fire.jpg);
display: block;
height: 15px;
width: 16px;
}
But it is not working for me.
Is their any other way for this?
I was able to change the "on" (the yellow star) image using this:
.rating .ui-rating-star-on a{
background-image: url("#{resource['images:new-document.png']}") !important;
display: block;
height: 15px;
width: 16px;
background-position: center;
}
If you want to change also the other images would be more tricky. Apparently checking the example in the Primefaces showcase website I can see this is what they are using:
I think if you would just create the same image picture as that and following the size (16X80) as well then replace the pictures accordingly, you can achieve achieve your desired effect.
Haven't tried it though on my end.

Centering text vertically in button

It should be simple to center text in a button. Unfortunately, across different browsers and platforms, I get different results.
I've tried for hours to fix it, but nothing works everywhere.
Chrome, mac OS X:
(source: d.pr)
Chrome, Windows 8
(source: d.pr)
IE 10, Windows 8
(source: d.pr)
So, yeah. The big block doesn't appear in IE if I set a defined height, but I don't get why it breaks down in the first place.
Here's the code:
.btn-call-to-action {
background: #8e8287;
margin-bottom: 15px;
color: #f5f3e2;
padding: 3px 18px 3px 10px;
margin-top: 6px;
display: inline-block;
position: relative;
border-bottom: none;
border-radius: 2px;
white-space: nowrap;
.btn-call-to-action a:after {
content: url('../img/general-white-arrow.svg?1369574895');
position: absolute;
width: 35px;
right: 15px;
top: 0px; }
and the HTML (pretty simple) :
Want more ?
and the site: http://aurelieremia.be/tfa/
// edit: I think I get it. Still not centered in windows but by resetting the line height, the button looks a bit more normal. IE problem resolved, I'll try using a background-image instead (thanks Ana)
I'm not sure if this will help but cross browser centering in css is a big pain so I use Twitter Bootstrap and overwrite some of the classes.
If this sounds like something you'd consider you can check out the solution here
Leave :after in static .
vertical-align to middle or explicite value (depends of where really stand arrow in svg/img).
white-space:nowrap to parent box to secure, but not necessary:
http://codepen.io/gcyrillus/pen/vzrGj
How about something like this:
HTML:
<a href="about.html">
<div class="btn-call-to-action">
<span>Want more? <img src="http://bkids.sisuweb.co/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/postArrowR.png" />
</span>
</div>
</a>
CSS:
.btn-call-to-action{
width:160px;
height:80px;
background: #8e8287;
padding: 3px 18px 3px 10px;
margin:8px;
color: #f5f3e2;
border-radius: 2px;
display:table;
text-align:center;
}
.btn-call-to-action span{
display:table-cell;
vertical-align:middle;
}
Fiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/MQHVE/3/
The important part here is to have the wrapper (the a tag) display:table and the content (span) display:table-cell. Then you can apply vertical-align:middle to the span.

What is this weird white border that's appearing around my HTML input submit button?

Here's a screenshot.
And my CSS markup:
.submitbutton
{
background: url("/Content/SiteImages/button.png") no-repeat scroll 0 0 transparent;
color: white;
cursor: pointer;
height: 26px;
width: 76px;
margin-left: 8px;
margin-top: 12px;
}
Also, I'd like the background image to stretch to fit into the dimensions of the button. Currently it's displaying full size (I think). Any tips for this new HTML web developer?
HTML buttons always have a border, simply setting border:0; should fix this.
Try stating
background: 0; outline: 0;
on it.
Note: This should only be used for testing purposes, disabling the outline makes people who navigate with their keyboards to not receive feedback when focusing on your button.
If it works, try using a more subtle outline.

chrome/safari display border around image

Chrome and Safari are displaying a border around the image, but I don't want one. There is no border in Mozilla. I've looked through the CSS and HTML, and I can't find anything that is fixing it.
Here is the code:
<tr>
<td class="near">
<a href="../index.html"class="near_place">
<img class="related_photo" />
<h4 class="nearby"> adfadfad </h4>
<span class="related_info">asdfadfadfaf</span>
</a>
...
CSS:
a.near_place {
border: none;
background: #fff;
display: block;
}
a.near_place:hover{
background-color: #F5F5F5;
}
h4.nearby {
height: auto;
width: inherit;
margin-top: -2px;
margin-bottom: 3px;
font-size: 12px;
font-weight: normal;
color: #000;
display: inline;
}
img.related_photo {
width: 80px;
height: 60px;
border: none;
margin-right: 3px;
float: left;
overflow: hidden;
}
span.related_info {
width: inherit;
height: 48px;
font-size: 11px;
color: #666;
display: block;
}
td.near {
width: 25%;
height: 70px;
background: #FFF;
}
Sorry, I copied some old code before. Here is the code that is giving me trouble
Thanks in advance
Now I don't know if this is a bug with Chrome or not but the grey border appears when it can't find the image, the image url is broken or as in your case the src isn't there. If you give the image a proper URL and the browser finds it then the border goes away. If the image is to not have a src then you will need to remove the height and width.
sarcastyx is right, but if you want a workarround you can set the width and height to 0 and a padding to make space for your image.
If you want a icon of 36x36, you can set width and height to 0 and pading:18px
I know it is an old question. But another solution is to set the src to a 1x1 transparent pixel
<img class="related_photo"
src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" />
This works for me.
.related_photo {
content: '';
}
This may happen when the image is planted dynamically by css (e.g. by http://webcodertools.com/imagetobase64converter) in order to avoid extra HTTP requests. In this case we don't want to have a default image because of performance issues. I've solved it by switching from an img tag to a div tag.
img[src=""]{
content: "";
}
Lazy image solution (img loading="lazy")
If you are using lazy image loading you may notice this thin thin border before the image has loaded more than if you didn't.
You're more likely to see this for a horizontal scrolling gallery than a normal vertical scrolling webpage.
Why?
Lazy loading unfortunately only works on the vertical axis. I'm assuming this is because there's a high likelihood that you're going to scroll down, but not left to right. The whole point of lazy loading is to reduce images 'below the fold' from consuming unnecessary bandwidth.
Soution 1:
Detect when the user has scrolled (eg. using intersection observer) and then set loading="eager" on each image you want to immediately load.
I haven't actually tested this, and it's possible some browser's won't immediately load images - but it should be fine.
Solution 2:
Detect when the image has finished loading loaded and then fade it in.
img.setAttribute('imageLoaded', 'false');
img.onload = () =>
{
img.setAttribute('imageLoaded', 'true');
};
Then with css hide the image until it's loaded, after which it fades in nicely:
img
{
opacity: 1;
transition: opacity .5s;
}
img[imageLoaded='false']
{
opacity: 0; // hide image including gray outline
}
Also this behavior is subject to change, the browser may be clever enough to detect a horizontal scrolling element in future - but right now Chrome and Safari both seem to have a zero pixel window for looking for horizontal lazy images.
img.related_photo {
width: 80px;
height: 60px;
**border: solid thin #DFDFDF;** //just remove this line
margin-right: 3px;
float: left;
overflow: hidden;
}
Inside img.related_photo, you need to change border: solid thin #DFDFDF; to border: 0.
I have fixed this issue with:
<img src="img/1.jpg" style="height:150px; position: absolute; right: 15px;">
The right: 15px is where you want the image to be shown, but you can place it where you want.
I just added src="trans.png", trans.png is just a 100x100 transparent background png from photoshop.
Worked like a charm no borders
To summarise the answers given already: your options to remove the grey border from an img:not([src]), but still display an image using background-image in Chrome/Safari are:
Use a different tag that doesn't have this behaviour. (Thanks #Druvision) Eg: div or span. Sad face: it's not quite as semantic.
Use padding to define the dimensions. (Thanks #Gonzalo)Eg padding: 16px 10px 1px; replaces width:20px; height:17px; Sad face: dimensions and intentions aren't as obvious in the CSS, especially if it's not an even square like #Gonalo's example.

HTML/CSS: One element, 1 pixel high, 100% wide, 0 images, single color, all browsers

I'm looking for a way to do something which in my opinion should be super simple, but I couldn't figure it out...
I want a graphical element on my web page which is exactly 1 pixel high, 100% wide and has a certain color, let's say red. It should look exactly the same in all browser and should preferably not break the semantics too much.
I don't want to use any images for this and I don't want to use more than one HTML element. Of course, I will not use JavaScript.
I tried the old classic which probably many of you know:
<div class="hr"></div>
<style ...>
.hr {
height: 1px;
background: red;
width: 100%;
font-size: 1px; /* IE 6 */
}
</style>
The problem with the above solution is that IE6 will render this as two or three pixels high, to fit the non-existing contents of the div.
Any ideas?
just do
.hr {
height: 0px;
margin: 0px;
border-bottom: 1px solid #FF0000;
font-size: 1px;
}
I went through the same thing when I was new to CSS.
adding an overflow: hidden; style should fix it also.
I don't have IE6 handy to test, but an actual HR tag can work in modern browsers. Took me a couple of tries to realise you set the background color not the border color:
hr { width:75%; height:1px; background-color:#ebebeb; border:none; margin:1.5em auto; }
(adjust to suit)
I don't have IE6 to test this, but I remember it had to do something with the line height. Have you tried this?
line-height: 1px;