CSS - Fluid Layout: Image Size Unpredictable
Hi,
I hope someone can help. I have a blog with a fluid design (as best I can) layout. Images are floated in the main post, with width and height specified as a %. Quite often when I first load a page with an image, the image is very small and anchored to the top left of a box (defined by a border) that is the correct dimensions. When I resize the window containing the blog, the images fill out the defined box and everything is fine. Can anyone help me avoid the erratic behavior when I first open a blog page? I'm using IE7 and IE8 and see the same thing in both browsers. I'd post the URL for the blog so anyone interested in helping could see what I mean, but as a relatively new member here, I am not allowed to do so. Thx in advance for any help that can offered. Bill Similar TutorialsHi, I have a background image that I want to incorporate into the header div of a fixed width layout. The header is of a gradient style - on the left it is a solid color and as you move along towards the right it fades to white. The image is 981x76. If I bring it into Gimp, I can scale it to 1920 x 76 and it looks the same. I would like to be able to do that in a div tag, with the image as a background. I would like the image to scale horizontally just like I can do using Gimp. Is this possible? Basically, I want the browser to manage the scaling of the image. Link he rpisolution dot com/test/ Ok, the fixed-fluid-fixed part of the layout seems to work ok in the latest firefox and IE7 but it's broken in IE6 and possibly other versions. Could you guys take a look at the css? rpisolution dot com/test/css/style.css and see if you see what is breaking it in IE6, i thought I had put a hack that was supposed to fix the issues. btw, i know the CSS is probably ugly. sorry about that. thanks Hi all, I have a three column fluid layout that works reasonably well. However, I'm running into situations where people want to use these ridiculous tables that are way too big. What happens in those cases is that the middle column tends to just write itself on top of the right column. Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /> <title>Three columns</title> <style type="text/css"> body { font-size:1.1em; background: #0081b3; padding-bottom: 2em; text-align: center; } .clearfix:after { content: "."; display: block; height: 0; font-size: 0; clear: both; visibility: hidden; } .clearfix { display: block; } * html .clearfix { height: 1px; } .clearfix { display: block; } #base { border-top: 1px solid #ffffff; border-bottom: 1px solid #ffffff; background: #DFDFDF; } #main_block { margin: auto; text-align: left; } #content { padding: 10px; padding-top: 2em; clear: both; } #container_1, #container_2 { margin: 0; padding: 0; } .three_column #middle_content_template { margin: 0 210px; } #left_content { padding: 25px 10px 25px 10px; float: left; width: 185px; } #right_content_template { float: right; width: 200px; margin: 0; padding: 0; } #left_content, #middle_content_template, #right_content_template { padding: 10px; } </style> </head> <body> <div id="base"> <div id="main_block"> <div id="content"> <div id="container_1"> <div id="container_2" class="three_column"> <div class="clearfix"> <div id="left_content"> <p>Left box o' content.</p> </div> <div id="right_content_template"> <p>Right box o' content.</p> </div> <div id="middle_content_template"> <table> <tr> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> <td><p>Header</p></td> </tr> </table> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </div> </body> </html> What I'd like is for the middle column to just expand as wide as it needs to be and have the whole page expand as a result, pushing the right column properly to the right. Additionally, I'd like the gray box to expand with it. Is this possible? Hey, I'm creating a 2-column fluid layout and find myself with a problem regarding word wrapping (at least I think that's the problem). For some reason I can't seem to get my content text to behave properly, namely the text gets hidden behind the right column as I decrease the browser-window. The columns are set to 70% (left column) and 30%(right column), with the combined width varying from 760px to 960px. The text I am having problems with is located in the left column, 150px from the far left side. I want this text to stretch from that position up until the right column begins. This have proven quite difficult. The main problem is, I suppose, that the necessery width of the div element that the text is placed within changes as the overall width change. I have tried experimented with specifying the width in percentages, however the correct value for that changes aswell.. So I'm stuck. Hope I made myself clear enough, kind of difficult to explain it to be honest. Does anyone have any idea how I can fix this (without abandoning my overall fluid layout)? Any pointers would be greatly appreciated. Cheers. I have an issue with a 2 column CSS layout. Here is my code: Code: <style> #container1 { float:left; width:100%; } #col1 { float:left; width:30%; background:red; } #col2 { float:left; width:70%; background:yellow; } </style> <div id="container1"> <div id="col1">Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Morbi turpis augue, elementum nec euismod vel, ultricies a lorem. Duis ac posuere sem. In feugiat ante in orci ultricies non sagittis felis consectetur. </div> <div id="col2"><p> Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Morbi turpis augue, elementum nec euismod vel, ultricies a lorem. Duis ac posuere sem. In feugiat ante in orci ultricies non sagittis felis consectetur. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Etiam urna magna, tincidunt eu venenatis ac, imperdiet fermentum arcu. Pellentesque vehicula sollicitudin bibendum. Donec eu eros nibh. Phasellus ultricies aliquet mollis. Morbi vel ipsum vitae tellus porta accumsan quis quis ligula. Proin nulla tellus, mattis et interdum non, convallis ac ipsum. Morbi tellus nisl, tempor condimentum tincidunt a, tincidunt sed tellus. Sed cursus posuere erat a venenatis. Donec vel velit felis, sit amet posuere tortor. Etiam tincidunt orci ut est tincidunt bibendum vel in erat. Nunc dignissim faucibus enim sed rhoncus. Duis quam tellus, iaculis feugiat elementum eu, fermentum malesuada mauris. In metus nibh, sodales eget facilisis a, sollicitudin id lorem. </p> <p> Donec at eros tortor. Quisque et tellus ipsum, id sodales erat. Ut commodo ornare nisl, ut rhoncus arcu sagittis vel. Aliquam erat volutpat. Nulla non facilisis nunc. Suspendisse potenti. Suspendisse nulla massa, consequat nec tincidunt id, aliquam quis lacus. In hac habitasse platea dictumst. Aliquam sit amet pharetra magna. Praesent nibh est, consequat vitae congue nec, ullamcorper sit amet magna. Etiam sagittis dignissim mauris, eu dapibus leo fringilla eu. Morbi in ipsum lorem. Morbi pharetra sem at justo dictum non imperdiet libero convallis. Etiam sed arcu arcu. Maecenas vulputate, lorem at dignissim consequat, felis mauris pharetra ipsum, in condimentum urna ipsum sit amet lacus. Quisque facilisis fringilla felis et feugiat. Donec vel tincidunt dolor. Praesent congue nunc nec augue ornare vehicula. </p></div> </div> Which produces this: Basically, I need a set up on the columns so that if there is no content in the left column (col1) col 2 will fill up the missing area. It doesn't work with the above code, specifically because of this part of the CSS Code: #col2 { float:left; width:70%; background:yellow; } Which makes col2 move to the left, but retains the 70% width If i change the width to 100% or auto, then the col2 appears below col1 if I have content in col1. If I put no width or float in col2, the content in col2 wraps around col1: Help greatly appreciated This code produces what i want in IE. I'd like to know how to achieve the same result in firefox. The important parts of this layout is the fixed height for the footer and the testdiv completely filling the top td regardless of what else is in it. Code: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN"> <HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>TEST</TITLE> <style> body { margin: 0; padding: 0; } table { border-collapse: collapse; width: 100%; height: 100%; background: gray; } .top { background: aqua; } .bottom { background: yellow; height: 50px; } .testdiv { background: red; height: 100%; width: 100%; position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; } </style> </HEAD> <BODY> <table cellspacing=0 cellpadding=0> <tr> <td class='top'> other stuff <div class='testdiv'>test div</div> other stuff </td> </tr> <tr> <td class='bottom'> bottom bit </td> </td> </table> </BODY> </HTML> Hello, I came to this forum for help a couple months ago and was very impressed with how my questions were answered, so I hope nobody minds me coming around again. I've begun to create a stylesheet for my website that is completely fluid, rather than the 500px wide container my old stylesheet has. I've run into a couple problems that may or may not be related: 1) In my header div, I have an <h1> element and a <ul> that I'd like to be on the same line, but they're on different ones. 2) Both Firefox and Safari draw unnecessary scroll bars (both vertical and horizontal). 3) Sometimes my footer div will inch up from the bottom of the screen, where I'd hoped to leave it anchored. Here is a test html: http://www.bsuto.com/test.html and here is the css: http://www.bsuto.com/fluid.css Thanks! -Brian At the moment I have a css layout nearly done. It works fine in IE and Firefox except for that the left navbar does not push the footer down. Instead it jumps out the parent div. The 2nd (maincontent) and 3rd (right column) do push the footer down. This wouldn't be such a problem if the navbar would contain static content, but it is dynamic and database driven. A simple solution would be to move the navigate thing to the right bar, but sadly I'm not allowed to do that. Layout CSS code Code: #body { position:relative; margin:0 auto; width:94%; min-width:50em; max-width:70em; border: 15px solid #ffffff; } #header { /* border: 1px solid #000000;*/ height: 185px; background-color:#ffffff; background-image: url(../images/design/test3.jpg); } #outer_wrapper { background: #ffffff url(../images/design/background_3.gif) repeat-y left; border-top:none; border-bottom:none; } #wrapper { background: url(../images/design/background_2.gif) repeat-y right; } #container { width: 100%; float: left; margin-right: -200px; background: #ffffff url(../images/design/background_2.gif) repeat-y right; /*border:1px solid #000000;*/ } #content { margin-right: 200px; /*background: url(../images/design/background_3.gif) repeat-y left;*/ } #main { /*border:1px solid #000000;*/ margin-left: 150px; /* background-color:#bbbbbb;*/ } #left { position: absolute; top:189px; width: 140px; /* height: 100%;*/ float: left; text-align: left; /* border-left: 2px solid #bbbbbb;*/ font:normal normal normal 12px Verdana, Geneva, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; } #sidebar { width: 200px; float: right; clear:right; } #footer { /* border: 1px solid #000000;*/ background: #304773; height: 30px; } .last { margin-bottom: 0; } .clearing { height: 0; clear: both; } Div structu Code: <div id="body"> <div id="header"><h1>Welkom bij Overeem de Haas</h1> </div> <div id="outer_wrapper"> <div id="wrapper"> <div id="container"> <div id="content"> <div id="main"> </div> <div id="left"> <? include ("../include/navigatie.inc"); ?> </div> </div> </div> <div id="sidebar"> <? include ("../include/uitloggen.inc");?> <? include ("../include/winkelmand.inc"); ?> </div> <div class="clearing"> </div> </div> </div> <div id="footer"><p class="content"></p></div> </div> navigatie.inc code Code: <div id="navigatie"> <ul> <li class="menu">Navigatie menu</li> <li><a href="index.php">Home pagina</a></li> <li><a href="#">Wat is Overeem?</a></li> <? ... echo "<li><a href=\"#\">Contact</a></li>"; echo "</ul>"; echo "</div>"; ?> Live example Can anyone (dev)shed some light on this? I just can't get it to work without messing up the 3rd column. Whenever I work on a liquid layout, I have been setting the Max-Width to 1280px. Is this still the normal setting? Or designers do go wider these days? Thank you I'm attempting to get a page that has a header, footer, left navigation bar with a fixed width, with a right "fluid" content section. I can get it to work by giving the main content a "margin-left" of the width of the navigation panel, and absolutely positioning the navigation. Problem is, with the navigation being absolutely positioned, it takes it out of the flow and doesn't push the container to fit its contents. I've trying playing with using floated divs, which is I'm sure the way I'll have to go, but I want the navigation bar to always be a fixed width of 175px, and I want the content section to stretch to fill the remaining space. I'd also like to make sure the content portion appears BEFORE the navigation panel in the order it appears on the HTML for SEO purposes. I'm sure it's easy using Javascript, but I'd like to do a pure CSS solution, if possible. How do I do that? Here is the link if you want to have a look: http://www.chcs-ut.com/support.php?section=technical I'm trying to construct a complex 3-column CSS layout. I would like the center column to be fixed-width, and the outer columns to split the remainder of the document's width. All 3 columns should be able to contain centered or floated block elements and accept mouse events. Currently, I have approached this problem two nearly-successful ways. The first was to float the outer columns, but then I have no way to make them fill out. The second was to float the outer columns, then set them both to 50% with the appropriate margin set to half the width of the center column, but then I lose mouse event support in the center column because of the margins. The relevant CSS follows: Code: html { height: 100%; width: 100%; } body { margin: 0; height: 100%; width: 100%; } #left { float: left; height: 100%; /* 2nd attempt width: 50%; margin-right: 305px; */ } #right { float: right; height: 100%; /* 2nd attempt width: 50%; margin-left: 305px; */ } #center { margin: auto; height: 100%; width: 610px; } HTML-wise, the div order is #left, #right, #center. Does anyone know of a way to work around this? I am trying to get the background image for #feature-stripe to be fluid. I want it to expand and contract equally with the images just above and below it. The other images are in the #banner & #main-center. I can't seem to get the #feature-stripe to do the same. Also, I am using the #main-left as a placeholder for position. I tried to eliminate it, but things to line back up like I think they should. Side note: I am using XHTML 1.0 Strict DTD. Any help or if someone could point me in the right direction I would appreciate it. CSS Code: Original - CSS Code body { margin: 0px 0px 0px 0px; padding: 0px; background: #431111; } #main-right { width: 20%; float: left; background: url('column_background2.png') repeat; overflow: hidden; padding-bottom: 5px; } #main-right p{ padding: 5px 10px 5px 10px; } #main-center { width: 60%; float: left; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; background: #000; padding-bottom: 0px; } #main-center #img { margin-left: 0%; } #main-left { width: 10%; float: left; /*background: #fff; */ padding-bottom: 10px; } #banner { background: #000 url('front-basket_1.png') no-repeat; height: 9.7em; width: 80%; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; color: gold; } #banner #right { float:right; width: 25%; height: 9.7em; background: url('column_background2.png') repeat; margin:0px 0px 10px 10px; } #banner #right p{ padding: 5px 10px 5px 10px; } #feature-stripe { background: #5B0E0E url('front-basket_2.png') no-repeat; background-position: 12.7% 0%; height: 20px; } body { Code: XHTML <div id="banner"><div id="right"></div></div> <div id="feature-stripe"></div> <div id="main-left"></div> <div id="main-center"><div id="img"><img src="front-basket_3.png" alt="" /></div></div> <div id="main-right">This is the main right</div> Edit: Currently I am getting this to work in Firefox. I will worry about the others later. Therefore, I may be back with more questions later. I've got two hidden maps which display in a div when the link is hovered. If I put an H3 inside the anchor to style the link text, it doesn't inherit the link and hover colors of the rest of the site. If I move the H3 outside the <a href> it breaks the hidden span stuff in Firefox. But the colors work! If I just use normal text it works fine but displays inline and small and crappy... Here is my CSS for the div: Code: div#maplinks {margin:10px 0; padding:0;} div#maplinks a span {display: none;} div#maplinks a:hover span {display: block; position: absolute; top: 1em; left: 330px; width: 420px; padding: 0px; margin: 0px; z-index: 100; background: white; text-align: center;} and the HTML Code: <div id="maplinks"> <a href="images/sabah-map-400X319.jpg"><h3> View Sabah Map</h3><span><img class="centimg" src="images/sabah-map-400X319.jpg" width="400" height="319" border=0 alt="Sabah Map"><p class="credit">Sabah Tourism</p></span></a> <a href="images/borneo-map.gif"> Map of Borneo and Region<span><img class="centimg" src="images/borneo-map.gif" width="420" height="330" border=0 alt="Borneo Map"><p class="credit">Expedia.com</p></span></a> </div> <!-- maplinks --> How would I address this <h3> element? Or do I try to style that div's a:link and a:hover? (that didn't seem to work). I have a layout that has the normal four divs: Header Navigation Content Footer All of the divs are 775 px wide and are centered. The nav is a list of 6 links, and right now they take up very little space relative to the 775px they sit above. I would like them auto fit so that they take up all of the all of the 775px. If it is possible, I would like them to do correct depending on what is typed it, so that I'm giving each a specific px width. I've attached the HTML and the CSS that accompanies it. I'd post a link to a snapshot of it, but I can't post links yet. :x Any help would be greatly appreciated! HTML: Code: <div id="nav"> <ul> <li style="margin-left: 1px"><a href="/link1.html"><span>link1</span></a></li> <li><a href="/link2.html"><span>link2</span></a></li> <li id="current"><a href="/link3.html"><span>link3</span></a></li> <li><a href="/link4.html"><span>link4</span></a></li> <li><a href="/link5.html"><span>link5</span></a></li> <li><a href="/link6.html"><span>link6</span></a></li> </ul> </div> CSS: Code: body { background-color: #636c08; background-image: url(images/background.gif); background-repeat: repeat-x; } h1 { font: bold 18px Arial, Verdana, sans-serif; color:#630; } #container { margin: 0 auto; text-align: left; width: 775px; } #header { position:realtive; left:0px; top:0px; width:775px; } #nav{ margin-left: 4px; padding: 0; width: 100%; background: transparent; voice-family: "\"}\""; voice-family: inherit; padding-left: 5px; } #nav ul{ font: bold 16px Arial, Verdana, sans-serif; margin:0; padding:0; list-style:none; } #nav li{ display:inline; margin:0 2px 0 0; padding:0; } #nav a{ float:left; color: white; background: #87A00C url(images/leftcap2.png) no-repeat left top; margin:0 2px 0 0; padding:0 0 px 3px; text-decoration:none; letter-spacing: 1px; } #nav a span{ float:left; display:block; background: transparent url(images/rightcap2.png) no-repeat right top; padding:4px 9px 6px 6px; } #nav a span{ float:none; } #nav a:hover{ background-color: #C1CF2B; color: #000000 } #nav a:hover span{ background-color: #C1CF2B; } #nav #current a, #ddcolortabs #current span{ /*currently selected tab*/ background-color: #C1CF2B; color:#000000; } #topbar{ clear: both; padding: 0; width: 100%; height: 16px; line-height: 16px; background: #C1CF2B; } #content { background-color:#EAEEB3; padding: 8px; } #bottombar{ clear: both; padding: 0; width: 100%; height: 16px; line-height: 16px; background: #C1CF2B; } #footer { font: bold 9px Arial, Verdana, sans-serif; color:#FFF; text-align:center; } Hello. How do you stretch a background-image so its height and width are equal to its parent? Well, not exactly an image map, more like links on an image. You'll have to excuse some of my ignorance, I only started with CSS a little over a week ago...so you can imagine. I found this neat little trick and wanted to implement it on my site. I'm undertaking a redesign of our companies old site...which was terrible. I figured it would be a fine time to learn CSS. The idea here is that there are about 50 points on this map that are links to pdf files, we decided that it would be nice to be able to see little thumbnails and some basic info on each point without opening the pdf. The site does this just fine, but unfortunately won't work in anything lower than 1280x1024. I can't just resize the images because then the links will be messed up as they're posisioned by the pixel. I have no idea what to do to get this to work, it may just be a lost cause. If someone tells me to forget it, and it's just not going to work...I can live. It's really just a neat thing I wanted to see work, it's not crucial. Any ideas at all would be great, at the very least I might learn something Oh...here's the site: http://www.sanitaryengineer.co.medina.oh.us/gis/test.html Thanks a million hey all..got a wierd one..well to me anyway ! hope someone can tell me what im doing wrong !! i have code like this Code: #banner img { height: 15em; width: 25em; margin: 0.5em; } to manage the size of an image but i want to add another image to the page and i can't the css can be found here and the page im working on can be found here if anyone has any ideas that wouldbe marvelous... thanks RF Hello, not entirely sure how to go about this, but I'm using Dreamweaver CS5 and I'm working on my home page. The way I have it set up is I have a "sidebar" to the left, then a large "main_image" to the right of that which begins my "container" div followed by some "body_copy" below that. Everything looks good when the window is in a max size. The problem arrises whenever I resize my window the main_image moves to below the sidebar and everything just seems to shift down... The main_image is set to relative so the body_copy text can form properly under it. Is there any way to have the image remain stationary despite window size? Thanks for your help!! My code works well in Internet Explorer and Safari but it does not work the way I want it to in Firefox and Opera. My items with red borders should always stay close to the blue bar in the background. But in Firefox and Opera the body background moves to the left when the window size is small, and the items with red borders appear to move away from the blue bar. The problem is the way in which these browsers center the background image for the body. Can anyone help me fix this issue? Thanks! Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <title>Demo</title> <style type="text/css" media="all"> html, body { padding: 0px; margin: 0px; height: 100%; width: 100%; text-align: center; } body { background: #555 url(http://www.glidestor.co.uk/images/PageBackground.gif) repeat-y scroll 50% 0; color: #111; } #page { width: 617px; margin: 0 auto 0 auto; padding: 0 0 0 160px; text-align: left; position: relative; border: 1px solid #55aa77; } #homeFeatures { margin: 420px 0 0 0; } #homeFeatures #f1, #homeFeatures #f2, #homeFeatures #f3 { padding: 0 40px 0 12px; font-size: 9pt; font-weight: 300; width: 200px; display: block; text-decoration: none; float: left; border: 1px solid red; } </style> </head> <body> <div id="page"> <div id="homeFeatures"> <a href="#" title="Item 1" id="f1"><strong>Item 1</strong>J khfdg jkfkfhkjfsh ksh fhdk ghjkhfsdkjg hsdfjkhsdfjkkjsdf hgkjfsd hgkjfdh gkjfh kjghkjfdh kfj hkfjd hfkdjg hk jghfsdkj ghfsdjk hgfjdhg jsdfgh sdfj ghf.<span>more</span></a> <a href="#" title="Pring Design" id="f2"><strong>Item 2</strong>T khfdg jkfkfhkjfsh ksh fhdk ghjkhfsdkjg hsdfjkhsdfjkkjsdf hgkjfsd hgkjfdh gkjfh kjghkjfdh kfj hkfjd hfkdjg hk jghfsdkj ghfsdjk hgfjdhg jsdfgh sdfj ghf.<span>more</span></a> <a href="#" title="Item 3" id="f3"><strong>Item 3</strong>B khfdg jkfkfhkjfsh ksh fhdk ghjkhfsdkjg hsdfjkhsdfjkkjsdf hgkjfsd hgkjfdh gkjfh kjghkjfdh kfj hkfjd hfkdjg hk jghfsdkj ghfsdjk hgfjdhg jsdfgh sdfj ghf.<span>more</span></a> </div> </div> </body> </html> Hello, I'm using jquery and the cycle plugin to cycle through a few images on my homepage inside a container.When i load the website at any browser size, it seems to do the proper thing. The problems arise when i try to make the browser bigger or smaller after that, it does funky things to the images. If you begin to scale the browser when the first image is displayed, it also seems to scale properly for that first image, but goes haywire after that. It pretty much does it in all browsers and i can't seem to figure out if it's something im not setting properly within css or if it have something to do with jquery and the cycle plugin. here's the website thus far: www.beaucoupla.com this is my first time writing code so please any help would be appreciated! Code: @charset "utf-8"; /* CSS Document */ #mainWrapper { /* background:#000 right top no-repeat; min-width:1000px; min-height:775px; border:0px; background-color:#000; */ padding: 0 0 0 1px; margin:0; top:0; left:0; width:100%; } .mainbar { position:absolute; top:0px; left:0px; display:none; visibility:hidden; width:78%; min-height:100%; height:auto; /*This works for IE7 min-height:775px; height:775px;*/ border-right: #FFF solid medium; } #imagelist { left:0; position:absolute; display:block; visibility:visible; /* width:auto; static size */ } #imagelist img { display:block; } #imagelist img.first { display:block; } .theimage { position:absolute; left:0; width:100%; /* Adding this works for IE7 */ /* height:775px; */ border-right: solid #FFF medium; } #podcast { /*right:303px; */ position:absolute; top:0px; left:0px; height:100%; } .about_info p { font-size:1.1em; } .contact_info, .about_info, .news_info { position:relative; margin-top:4em; margin-left:10%; width:78%; font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; font-size:1.3em; color:#FFF; height:100%; } .contact_info #title, .about_info #title, .news_info #title { font-size:1.75em; padding-bottom:1.5em; color:#1ac089; color:#03c5d1; } .contact_info .heading { color:#c04141; font-size:1.2em; } .contact_info .mail { text-decoration:underline; } .contact_info a:hover { color:blue; text-decoration:underline; } .news_info .heading { color:#c04141; } body { /*width:1400px; height:775px;*/ padding:0; margin:0; border:0; background-color:#000; } #share td { padding-left:0.5em; } #share { margin-left:1.4em; margin-top:0; border-top:0; /* padding-top:5; */ font-size:0.65em; } .sidebar { position:relative; font-family:Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-weight:bold; margin-left:78%; margin-top:1em; font-size:2em; color:#FFF; } ul { border:0; margin:2px; text-decoration:none; } li { list-style:none; } a { text-decoration:none; color:#FFF; } a.home:hover { color:#bc7bd4; } a.news:hover { color:#7bd488 } a.podcast:hover { color:#d47b88; } a.blog:hover { color:#d4cb7b; } a.about:hover { color:#7bd4c6; } a.contact:hover { color:#d4a37b; } a.twitter:hover { color:#33ccff; } a.myspace:hover { color:#999; } a.facebook:hover { color:#5b61d5; } |