CSS - Increasing Size Of <select> Box
Hi
Is it possible to set the size of a <select> box? I have a multiple selection box and I'd like to make it wider than the items it is showing. Purely cosmetic, but I'd like to do it if poss. Thanks Similar Tutorialshow can you specify a new font size in a select list. I need to make the items appearing in that list smaller than they already are. Hello, I'm trying to make the left and right divs increase length with the centre (content) div. http://offhourscomputing.com/test.htm I've tried experimenting with using 100% and auto for the height, but that either makes the left and right sides exactly 100% of the height space in my browser or makes them disappear (using auto). Thanks. Hi there, I'm completely new to CSS. I'm trying to do this more than one hour but can't get it right. Code: <font color='white'><font size='1' face=verdana size=1> I couldn't find the equivalent of this in CSS This is my last experiment but it doesn't seem to work either Code: fontstyle { color : #FFFFFF; font-family : verdana ; font-size :1;} Thanks So when using Netscape 7.2 & Opera 7.5 and MSIE 6.0, How do you get a simple tag like body { font-size:small; } to be equal in all browsers? Setting IE Text Size to Medium, and Opera's Zoom to 100% (both defaults) and Netscape 7.2 to 120% (not the default) is one way, but is there a CSS way? By the way, the child element hack "body>div {property}" wasn't working no matter what I tried, by not working I mean to say Netscape never would read it or apply it. It appeared to be that Opera & IE need to read the same value while Netscape needs to apply a larger size to be equal to IE's and Opera's rendering. B I could see this as potentially being really easy to do or really hard to do. I'm hoping for the former. Suppose I have 3 divs, A, B, C and that I want the total width of A + B + C to equal the width of the screen. Suppose also that I want them to be inline. How can I have B to be a fixed width while A and C expand depending on the screen width (such that the width of A = the width of C)? http://www.santeecooperobgyn.com/obgyn I have just begun to design a website and already I have run into bizarre (to me) behavior. In the horizontal navigation bar, when you run your mouse over it, you can see that the inline element is bigger than the block element container because the background color changes, revealing a small 2px or so size difference. Here is the relevant CSS. Code: * { padding: 0px; margin: 0px; } #navbar { list-style-type: none; margin-left: 0px; background-color: #336633; padding: 0em; height: 2em; margin: 0px; font-size: 10pt; } #navbar li { display: inline; float: left; padding: 0.5em; } #navbar li a { color: white; text-decoration: none; text-transform: uppercase; padding-left: 10px; padding-right: 10px; padding-top: 0.5em; padding-bottom: 0.5em; vertical-align: baseline; line-height: 100%; } #navbar li a:hover { background-color: #669966; I have no idea why this happens, unless the inline element content height is actually determined by factors other than the line-height. It seems like the total height should sum to 2em in both cases. Hi, Im trying to code a small portfolio page but im having trouble with the sizing of one of the sections. Here is my page: http://www.zombiemod.com/blog/?cat=1#all Here is my code for the div: Code: #container div { margin-right:3px; float:left; width:296px; height:130px; border:1px solid #999; position:relative; overflow:hidden; } How do I make the Div display this size correctly? This should be fairly simple, but I can't figure it out right now. I have a list of nav buttons that I have floated so they are inline. When I hover over them, a 4px border appears at the bottom. The problem is, it pushes my content container down on hover. I've tried margins and padding in different places, but can't seem to prevent it from happening. How do you prevent this? Code: #navcontainer { display:inline; } #navlist { margin: 0; padding: 0; padding-bottom:20px; border-bottom: 1px solid #FDC737; float:right; } #navlist ul, #navlist li { margin: 0; padding: 0; display: inline; list-style-type: none; } #navlist li { line-height: 14px; } #navlist a:link, #navlist a:visited { float: left; font-weight: bold; margin: 0 10px 4px 10px; text-decoration: none; color: #fff; } #navlist a:link#current, #navlist a:visited#current, #navlist a:hover { border-bottom: 4px solid #FDC737; padding-bottom: 2px; background: transparent; color: #FDC737; } #navlist a:hover { color: #fdc737; } Code: ----------------------------------------------------- | | H1 |image| | | H2 Inline nav tabs ----------------------------------------------------- New to CSS, but I'm looking for the following: I would like to create this matrix, with say 3/3 fields. Each of these fields will have an image of a particular size. The size for all 9 fields are identical. So something like: ******************************* * * * * * Image 1 * Image 2 * Image 3 * * * * * ******************************* * * * * * Image 4 * Image 5 * Image 6 * * * * * ******************************* * * * * * Image 7 * Image 8 * Image 9 * * * * * ******************************* I defined the matrix using div with the code: .matrixX10 { margin-top: 10%; position: absolute; } .matrixX20 { margin-top: 20%; position: absolute; } .matrixX30 { margin-top: 30%; position: absolute; } .matrixY10 { margin-left: 10%; position: absolute; } .matrixY20 { margin-left: 20%; position: absolute; } .matrixY30 { margin-left: 30%; position: absolute; } I defined each field as in eg: <div class="matrixX10 matrixY10">image 1</div> That actually works, but I would like to define the size of these images. Defining the size of the div does do anything (do I overlook something) and I do not like to, well define all images individually. Do I need to add another class, or am I writing a really messy code? Well, the title might be a little oversimplified, but I guess it caught your attention In the past, I always set my font sizes using px. I know that this is not the appropriate standard (since it doesn't allow a user to re-size the font on their end), but I usually did it because it was easiest and most predictable. Now, I finally want to make the step towards more accessibility and I would like to learn a little bit more about using em's appropriately. Does anyone have any good advise on how to get started with the following questions: How/where do I set the initial font-size, from which I can use em's? What are the dangers of using em's instead of px? Where could this change impact my usual styling? Are there any good resources/tutorials about this? Any help/suggestions/ideas are appreciated... Hello, I have something has follows: <div> ... <table> ... </table> </div> My document font size is 1em. My div font size is 1.4em. What should be the font-size in my table to get back to the 1em of the document? Thanks, Miguel Hello, How large should my css file size be? Is it possible to define the size of a DIV, by distance to the edges? hi, someone using foxfire keeps saying the my font is really really tiny, I have my css file like:
Code: body { background: #FFFFFF; /* for internet explorer */ scrollbar-face-color: #FFFFFF; scrollbar-highlight-color: #FFFFFF; scrollbar-shadow-color: #FFFFFF; scrollbar-3dlight-color: #494969; scrollbar-arrow-color: #494969; scrollbar-track-color: #FFFFFF; scrollbar-darkshadow-color: #494969; margin: 0px; padding: 0px; border: 0px; border-top: 1px solid #8E9397; border-left: 1px solid #8E9397; font-color: #494969; font-family: Verdana,Arial,Helvetica; font-size: 8pt; text-align: left; } a:link,a:active,a:visited { color: #494969; text-decoration: none } a:hover { text-decoration: underline; color: #494969; position: relative; top: -1px; left: -1px; } hr { background: transparent; color: #494969; height: 1px; border-width: 0px; } fieldset { margin: 0; padding: 1px; border: 1px solid #494969; } legend { margin: 0; padding: 7px; color: #494969; background: transparent; font-weight: bold; } img { border: 0px; } table { background: transparent; } tr { background: transparent; } td { background: transparent; color: #494969; font-family: Verdana,Arial,Helvetica; font-size: 70%; } input, textarea, select { color: #494969; font: normal 11px Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; background: transparent; border: 1px solid #494969; border-style: inset; text-align: center; text-indent: 2px; } form { margin: 0px; padding: 0px; } any idea on whats wrong? and I would of changed the % to an actual value but I wanted to make it so people can control the size of the font to lager or smaller here is a preview with that css file in use : http://www.dbznetwork.net/ People viewing my site at 120 dpi are seeing misaligned text and layout, whereas people viewing the site at 96dpi can see it properly. I'm using "em" instead of pixels when setting font sizes in CSS. The site has fixed length and width, do I HAVE to allow it to resize itself? Please help! I've got two rounded boxes one is contained in the other. If the innerbox grows, the outer box should grow with it. Firefox does a great job and grows with it but IE7 doesn't grow, any help would be greatly appreciated. here's the CSS i've used for IE: Code: /* first rounded box */ /* images are set in the index.php */ /* height and width details */ .rbtop div, .rbtop, .rbbot div, .rbbot { width: 100%; height: 14px; font-size: 1px; } /*.rbroundbox { width: 60em; margin: auto; background-color: #37a5f0;} */ .rbroundbox { position: absolute; top: 15px; width: 800px; margin: 5em 0 0 2em; background-color: #37a5f0; } .rbcontent { margin: 0 14px; min-height: 570px; height: 100%; } /* EOF first rounded box */ /* second rounded box */ /* images are set in the index.php */ /* height and width details */ .rbtop2 div, .rbtop2, .rbbot2 div, .rbbot2 { width: 100%; height: 24px; font-size: 1px; } /*.rbroundbox { width: 60em; margin: auto; }*/ .rbroundbox2 { position: absolute; top: 5px; width: 577px; margin: 9.5em 0 0 12em; background-color: #9cd5f0;} .rbcontent2 { margin: 0 14px; min-height: 375px; } /* EOF second rounded box */ here's the html i've used: Code: <body> <div class="rbroundbox"> <div class="rbtop"><div></div></div> <div class="rbcontent"> <div class="rbroundbox2"> <div class="rbtop2"><div></div></div> <div class="rbcontent2"> <p><?=$content?></p> </div><!-- /rbcontent2 --> <div class="rbbot2"><div></div></div> </div><!-- /rbroundbox2 --> </div><!-- /rbcontent --> <div class="rbbot"><div></div></div> </div> <!-- /rbroundbox --> </body> I'm not a programmer by nature, but am picking things up as I go along. I'm working on some forms to make my job easier. Hopefully what I will provide below is enough info to provide a solution. If not, let me know what else you might need. I understand that this section of CSS manipulates the size and other attributes of the textarea input box: fieldset div input,fieldset div textarea { width:150px; border-top:1px solid #555; border-left:1px solid #555; border-bottom:1px solid #ccc; border-right:1px solid #ccc; padding:1px;color:#333; } What I am looking for is what do I need to add to my CSS and consequent HTML markup to have other textarea input boxes with different attributes? What I really need is to have 4 small boxes within the same div on the same row. Thanks in advance!! Hi, For some reasons, my CSS linked file is not taking any more rules. Is there a maximal number of rules per CSS file? Thanks Hello. I was wondering how I would go about doing this. I have a div, the left and right side of it is an image that I want the size to be able to be fluctuated, say, if the div goes larger than say 50 px, then it will start repeating and get larger. I have tried to start this already, but I havent had any luck. I also am not having any luck on getting the backgroun image to show. Anyone here know how I would make it to where my left or right side (border-right, border-left) will automatically resize if it is needed to go larger or get my background image to show? It's for a news conent box for my website I am coding, and I need it to go larger than just a set value. Thanks for your help. P.S. this is what I have so far Code: <div style="width:460; height: auto; border-right: url("images/border_right.gif"); border-left: url("images/border_left.gif"); background-image: url("images/content_content.gif"); background-repeat: repeat;"> News content will go here </div> I am new to adsense. I was wondering if I should specify the size of each ad in css (via the div I have around each ad). Or is this unnecessary? (I am not asking if I can change the designated size of the ads in css, but just if I should put in the width and height of the standard ad sizes I have chosen). Any insight would be greatly appreciated. Thanks. |