On this page I have 2 background images:
(1) A blue sunburst that is set as a background image of <html>
html {
background: url("BEhmxDlyFwihBhnuPwHL8VU1fr59VGeXflJlinXMr5q.svg") no-repeat fixed center center / 100% auto transparent;
outline: 0 none !important;
}
(2) An image showing a crowd of arms in the air that appears at the bottom of every page. I use the sticky footer solution to make this stick to the bottom of each page
Everything works fine at normal browser widths, but once the browser width is below about 500px a white space starts appearing at the top:
and at the bottom
of every page. Previously I used
background-size: cover;
for the sunburst image, but this caused the website to crash the browser on iOS 6 (seriously), so I need to find a way to fix this without using this rule.
The white space is due to the browser positioning the image center center as defined in the CSS.
html {
background: url(BEhmxDlyFwihBhnuPwHL8VU1fr59VGeXflJlinXMr5q.svg) no-repeat center center fixed;
background-size: 100%;
outline: 0!important;
}
I thought the solution would be just setting background-size: 100% 100% as the current setting of just background-size: 100%; is 100% width and auto height. But it's bugged in Chrome - background-size:100% 100%; doesn't work properly in Chrome. There is a workaround answer on that question that might help.
However, if the background-size: 100%; is dropped for width < 500px, perhaps in one of your #media rules, then the background fills the page as expected. The rule is still required when the window is greater than the width of the image to stretch the image.
If you're not opposed to a JS solution, you could try using Backstretch.
Set the background-size to something larger than 100%. I think 200-250% will cover that area.
background-size:220%;
One side effect this has is the fact that it causes slight lag due to the size.
Here, Have this solution...
In this file...
http://festivals.ie/static/C5z61WeZeCfyTRbmu6lNPsxXxwhibmxExq6ADwtSPjh.css
On line no 793,
this code is there in the last part of that line...
html{background:url(BEhmxDlyFwihBhnuPwHL8VU1fr59VGeXflJlinXMr5q.svg) no-repeat center center fixed;
background-size:100%;
outline:0!important;}
Add this property : background-position: 0px 0px;
Making the code:
html{background:url(BEhmxDlyFwihBhnuPwHL8VU1fr59VGeXflJlinXMr5q.svg) no-repeat center center fixed;
background-size:100%;
outline:0!important;
background-position: 0px 0px;}
And fyi, as andyb pointed out the white space is the image leaving its top position to be centered, thereby making it look like a white space starting to appear..
Hope you get the point.
Regards
Related
I have a Django site, and when I run it on my local machine everything is fine, but when I make it to pythonanywhere.com one little problem appears: somewhy and somehow my background image doesn't want to fill the whole page even though it does on my local host (using the same browser, so the problem is not here). Basically I don't mind changing the aspect ratio, I just want each pixel of the background to be fully on the screen, would it be either 600x400 or 200x2000.
body {
background: url("images/classes.jpg") no-repeat center center fixed;
background-size: 100% 100%;
}
It seems to me like {background-size: 100% 100%} just... doesn't work?
I tried to switch percents to 100vw 100vh, but the output was literally the same.
Page itself: http://seltsamermann.pythonanywhere.com/classes/
Image itself: https://i.ibb.co/0G86wL2/classes.jpg
I wonder what might be the problem.
(in case that might help somehow)
https://github.com/Seltsamermann/Specs-SL-PvP/blob/master/main/templates/main/classes.html
https://github.com/Seltsamermann/Specs-SL-PvP/blob/master/main/static/main/style_classes.css
The object-fit CSS property sets how the content of a replaced element, such as an <img> or <video>, should be resized to fit its container. Use this propriety for the image in your css, or the container that stores that image.
object-fit: cover;
For more : https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/object-fit
Try this:
body {
background: url("") no-repeat center center fixed;
background-position: center;
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-size: cover;
}
Well, basically I just outplayed myself; the real problem was the version control, I just missed several things. Code in the main post works totally fine.
Kind of weird title, but couldn't think of better way to word it.
Basically I'm working on a website, and I want to use an asset I made in photoshop for a navbar that looks like a leather suitcase/belt background. Issue is, if I stretch it too far, it won't fit the screen. Basically if I use the CSS background-size: cover; background-repeat: no-repeat; property, it looks something like this
It fits nicely on the 100% width of the element, but as you can see, the image is clipped because it's not 100px as I want it to be.
If I used background-size: contain; background-repeat: repeat-x; properties my image would obviously fit nicely when it comes to height, but since it's not a seamless texture it doesn't clip properly horizontally. As seen on the image below:
Which looks pretty weird as you can see. Last but not least I tried using the 50% 50% trick - background-position: 50% 50%; background-size: cover; background-repeat: no-repeat;, which kind of worked but i still have a problem with it not fitting vertically (the edges are being cut off), as you can see here:
So I'm asking if there's a way to fit the image properly with CSS that I'm missing. Alternatively the second image i posted with repeat-x, however if there would be a way to check (probably with javascript/jquery) that once the image doesn't fit (ala second image), it needs to be flipped horizontally with scaleX so the edges fit, or should I simply downscale the image in photoshop? Thanks for your advice.
Have you tried :
background-size: (100% 100%);
Try using viewport to give the element width in accordance with the screen width (100vw = 100% browser width).
.nav-belt {
width: 100vw;
height: 100%;
}
I need help and I did not found any proper answer so far. I want to make background image on my website that is full width and height and responsive to any resolution and it is ok but problem is when I put other images ( I have 7 images over background img ). I place them and set with media query for every resolution and it is ok only when is fullscreen but when I watch regularly with address bar and bookmark bar in my browser it all messes around and even my background picture is not full width and height anymore. Sorry for bad English.
CSS for body:
body {
background-image: url('images/background1.jpg');
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-position: top center;
background-attachment: scroll;
background-size: 100% 100%;
height: 100vh;
margin: 0px;
}
Then I put my images and with margin - left, right, bottom, top place them for different screen resolution in media query.
Do I need to set proper position to images or something else? Please give me a hint.
Edit:
This is what I get in fullscreen and it is ok
But this is when is not fullscreen
All are images except strips, those are part of background image.
Images have only margin style, nothing else. They are in divs with float style.
The easiest way to make background images responsive is this:
img{
background-image: url('.../your-image.jpg');
background-position: center;
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-size: cover;
}
I have a fixed, full screen background. I have another image a few hundred pixels from the top that I want the background to appear to emanate from. Looks good here: http://imgur.com/Rlki1Bk.jpg but when the browser is resized the centre of the background image moves vertically but the foreground image remains fixed so they are no longer aligned. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
EDIT: Some more info. The foreground image is position:relative, and here is the CSS for the background image:
.background {
background-attachment: fixed;
background-image: url('/background.jpg');
background-repeat: no-repeat;
background-position: 50% 50%;
background-size: cover;
}
Hard to tell what's going on without some code, but...
background{
background-image: url("my-image.jpg");
background-position: center top;
background-size: 100% auto;
}
This will ensure that the distance from the top of the window to the other image never changes because the height of the image remains the same, and the position of the image is always flushed to the top. The problem that you'll encounter is that depending on the width of the device your background may stretch.
I'm having trouble getting my website to display properly on mobile devices
Here's the code I used in my CSS, and this is what I want it to do on mobile devices too:
html {
background-image: url(/wp-content/themes/Newstyle/images/bg.jpg), url(/wp-content/themes/Newstyle/images/bg-repeat.jpg);
background-attachment: scroll, scroll;
background-color: #000;
background-repeat: no-repeat, repeat-y;
background-position: center top, center top;
}
html, body {
width:100%;
height:100%;
}
I have no idea what I've done wrong, I've tried a couple of fixes and I haven't been able to make it work. Can someone help? Links below.
My website - http://renoized.com
You could try either:
Background size: cover;
or
Use an image instead of a background, using absolute positioning and a z-index value of -999. Since iOS doesn't support background images with 100% width.
The method I used to fix the problem is this, regardless of how elegant or inelegant it is, I'm just glad it works.
All I had to do was copy the css from here:
html {
background-image: url(/wp-content/themes/Newstyle/images/bg.jpg), url(/wp-content/themes/Newstyle/images/bg-repeat.jpg);
background-attachment: scroll, scroll;
background-color: #000;
background-repeat: no-repeat, repeat-y;
background-position: center top, center top;
}
to my content container tag, which in my case is #page.
What this does is give the content its own background in the correct place. It also fixed a problem I had on .desktops where the background would move if your device width is smaller than the content <div>