CSS - Ie6 Adding Margin Value To Parent Element
My css is at CSS.
The site is at site The problem I am having is that on the .maintextdiv or the .subtextdiv if I add any left or right margin values IE6 in strict mode is adding that value to the parent element, #rightbox. I should clarify that if I add margin values to just one of them it displays fine, but if I add margin values to both of them then I end up with the problem of extra space added to the parent element. More wierdness, if those (maintextdiv and subtextdiv) are not floated then the problem doesn't show up at all. It's only once they got floated did I have problems. This behavior doesn't show up in FF or Safari. Anyone with any ideas? Similar TutorialsI have an navigation menu that I am building as an unordered list. What I have is an image rollover that appears at the bottom of the navigation menu when the cursor hovers over one of the first level links by using a span within the link that has its display set to none, and then set to absolute positioned directly below the navigation menu on a:hover. Here is an example: Code: <ul> <li> <a href="link1.html" id="link1">Link<span></span></a> </li> </ul> .link a { some link height } .link a span { display: none; } .link a:hover span { position: abolute; top: (some link height * the number of links); background-image: (some image url) width: (image width) height: (image height) } Appearance: ------ Link1 Link2 Link3 Link4 ------- ------- Rollover Image to appear here ------- The problem that I have is that since the rollover image is positioned absolutely, if the size of the list of links changes (IE with sub-links in the list) it slides under or over where I have the rollover image placed. IE ------ Link1 sublink1 sublink2 Link2 Link3 Link4 ------- will break my scheme. Is there a way to get the span within the link to show up relative to the bottom of the <ul> element, or at the bottom of an element that contains the whole shebang? If I cant get this to work, I'm going to be forced to adopt the existing tables/javascript based template for our site, and I'd hate hate hate to do that. thanks. Please look at this page - http://hometown.tmhdesign.com/ask.asp?faq=9 See how the <p> exceeds the containing box at the bottom? I put a border-bottom on the containing div to show you where the issue occurs. It does not happen in IE7 I just noticed it does it also on this page http://hometown.tmhdesign.com/staff.asp Is there a way to style an element's parent with css? I know something like .div1 p { stuff here } takes care of p's that are inside div1 but is there a way to style say any div1 with a div2 inside? Or a ul with a ul inside? Can anyone explain the difference between the two? For example, what is the difference between: this: element element {} div p { } and this: element > element { } div > p { } I don't understand it and have not found an explanation in tireless searching. Thx! title doesnt really explain it, but i cant really explain it well in 1 line. code I use is at bottom of the post but using the below code. If I take out the border-top declaration in #bodycontainer, it seems to lose the margin-top that is declared in the flashcontainer. when i say lose, the background-color of the bodycontainer no longer exists above the flashcontainer. it seems as the flashcontainer overlays the parent and moves up or whatever, if that makes any sense. this is in Firefox 3.0.3 code validates as transitional (and even strict if i change the doctype) i cannot figure out why either. i've used firebug to see if any CSS was overriding, but it doesnt seem to be any Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en"> <head> <title>Test</title> <style type="text/css"> <!-- body { margin: 0; padding: 0; } #bodycontainer { width: 960px; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; margin-bottom: 10px; background-color: #000; border-top: 1px solid yellow; /* remove this line */ } .flashcontainer { width: 950px; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; margin-top: 5px; border-top: 1px solid red; } --> </style> </head> <body> <div id="bodycontainer"> <div class="flashcontainer"> <img src="images/home_flash_area.jpg" width="950" height="240" alt="flash container" title="flash container" /> </div> <h2>Some Title</h2> <p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed doamet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do.</p> </div> </body> </html> Hi, Is it possible to change the css properties of a parent element without changing the properties of its childreen? That is, in the following code: Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> <html> <head> <title>ccc</title> </head> <body> <ul> <li>Hello <ul> <li>World</li> </ul> </li> </ul> </body> </html> Is it possible to modify the root UL to have font set to 200% without the child UL also being effected?? Thansk and Regards, Sim085 i have a block that i have the opacity set to .80. within this block i have text. The reason i have the opacity set at .80 is to help increase contrast between the background and text. the heading of the page is within the the block and is inheriting the opacity behaviour. Is there a way to turn this off? like a no-inherit? heres the block: #content { width: 470px; height: 380px; background: #fff; padding: 0px 5px 10px 10px; border: 0px solid yellow; overflow: scroll; float: clear; filter:alpha(opacity=80); -moz-opacity:0.8; opacity: 0.8; } page titles a .pagetitles { font-size: .8em; font-weight: bold; font-family: verdana, Georgia, Times, serif; color: #ffcc00; line-height: .4em ; } Please look at this page - http://www.soarminden.com/glider-soaring-gallery.asp I put a red border on parent element. The children divs appear outside the parent at page bottom? Can someone shed some light please? I think the issue is with the styling of the div(s) innerLeftColumn or LeftColumn Code: <div style='width:670px;margin:0;border:1px solid red;min-height:500px;position:relative;'> <div style='width:175px;height:150px;float:left;margin:20px 0 20px 10px;clear:left;'> <img src='images/gallery/1/tom6.jpg' style='width:175px;height:150px;margin-bottom:3px;'/><br /> <h4 style='text-align:center;font-size:12px;margin:0;padding-bottom:10px'><a href='glider-soaring-gallery2.asp?subject=1' style='color:#00f;line-height:1;text-decoration:undeline !important;'>Tom Hall Soaring</a></h4> </div> <div style='width:175px;height:150px;float:left;margin:20px 0 20px 10px;'> <img src='images/gallery/12/phil-jones2.jpg' style='width:175px;height:150px;margin-bottom:3px;'/><br /> <h4 style='text-align:center;font-size:12px;margin:0;padding-bottom:10px'><a href='glider-soaring-gallery2.asp?subject=12' style='color:#00f;line-height:1;text-decoration:undeline !important;'>Phil Jones Goes Gold & Diamond!</a></h4> </div> <div style='width:175px;height:150px;float:left;margin:20px 0 20px 10px;'> <img src='images/gallery/13/wedding1.jpg' style='width:175px;height:150px;margin-bottom:3px;'/><br /> <h4 style='text-align:center;font-size:12px;margin:0;padding-bottom:10px'><a href='glider-soaring-gallery2.asp?subject=13' style='color:#00f;line-height:1;text-decoration:undeline !important;'>Wolfram and Lydia's Wedding</a></h4> </div> <div style='width:175px;height:150px;float:left;margin:20px 0 20px 10px;clear:left;'> <img src='images/gallery/15/DSC_6547.jpg' style='width:175px;height:150px;margin-bottom:3px;'/><br /> <h4 style='text-align:center;font-size:12px;margin:0;padding-bottom:10px'><a href='glider-soaring-gallery2.asp?subject=15' style='color:#00f;line-height:1;text-decoration:undeline !important;'>Brennan Hall Soaring Lake Tahoe</a></h4> </div> <div style='width:175px;height:150px;float:left;margin:20px 0 20px 10px;'> <img src='images/gallery/16/teresa.jpg' style='width:175px;height:150px;margin-bottom:3px;'/><br /> <h4 style='text-align:center;font-size:12px;margin:0;padding-bottom:10px'><a href='glider-soaring-gallery2.asp?subject=16' style='color:#00f;line-height:1;text-decoration:undeline !important;'>Teresa Luther</a></h4> </div> </div> Please look at http://certified.tmhdesign.com/know.asp in FF I have a div element with an id of "know" that is appearing under an h1 element with an id of know_header In Firefox there is an unwanted top margin on the div#know (or a bottom margin on the H1 element). I can't seem to understand why? T The goal of the following code is to have a search box with several tabs above it to narrow down the search. The issue is that the design calls for a little upside down triangle to appear below the tab and bleed into the text box. The code works great in Firefox and even in IE6 where the Doctype was switched to HTML 3.2. I'm using 4.01 Transitional and noticing that the arrow doesn't center itself below the tab, rather it centers itself in the entire page. If I take out the width: 100% from .searchbox li.active .downarrow, then both browsers behave the same, although the downarrow now appears in the left bottom corner of the tab rather than the center. Note that I've stripped most of the code away to narrow down the issue. Code: <style> .searchbox ul { float: left; padding-left: 10px; list-style: none; padding: 0; margin: 10px 0 0 0; } .searchbox li { float: left; } .searchbox li .downarrow { display: none; } .searchbox li a { display: block; float: left; font-size: 12px; padding: 3px; color: #213327; } .searchbox li.active { position: relative; } .searchbox li.active a { color: #fff; border: 1px solid #b3b2b0; background: #266d1e url('/c2footsearchbg.jpg') repeat-x scroll top left; } .searchbox li.active a:hover { text-decoration: none; } .searchbox li.active .downarrow { display: block; position: absolute; bottom: -9px; width: 100%; height: 10px; text-align: center; margin: auto; } .searchbox div { clear: both; display: inline-block; } .searchbox input.txt { border: 2px solid #999; padding: 5px 0 0 3px; width: 305px; height: 30px; } .searchbox input.submit { font-weight: bold; font-size: 12px; color: #fff; width: 71px; height: 30px; border: 0; background: transparent url('/c2searchbutton.jpg') no-repeat scroll top left; vertical-align: top; cursor: pointer; } .searchbox input.submit:hover { background-position: 0 -30px; } </style> <div class="searchbox"> <h3>Search</h3> <ul id="c2FootSearch"> <li class="active"><a href="/index.php">Main</a><div class="downarrow">↓</div></li> <li><a href="/groups/">Groups</a><div class="downarrow">↓</div></li> <li><a href="/people/">People</a><div class="downarrow">↓</div></li> <li><a href="/petitions/">Petitions</a><div class="downarrow">↓</div></li> <li><a href="/news/">News</a><div class="downarrow">↓</div></li> <li><a href="http://www.google.com">Google</a><div class="downarrow">↓</div></li> </ul> <div> <form action="/searchall.html" method="post"> <input type="hidden" name="search" value="main" /> <input type="text" name="q" class="txt" /> <input type="submit" value="Search" class="submit" /> </form> </div> </div> I don't know why but for some reason I thought if you give an element a position of absolute the margin is irrelevant. Not so in FF huh? Tom Pleae look at this page in IE8 & Firefox - Click Here It appears as I want it in FF but in IE there is a gap between the paragraph in the center column and the first listing of product. I have tried to put margins on all elements but can not get that closed in IE. Can someone shed some light? Thanks. Tom Forget it, I solved the issue. How does one delete a post like this... Hi guys, I'm changing a simple page from a table style layout to CSS Positioning style. Here's a common line...it's working fine in IE, but not in Firefox (which immediately tells me there's something wrong with my coding). The code is: Code: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd"> <html> <head> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> <title>Overflowing Box</title> <style type="text/css"> div.row{ padding-top : 10px; font-family : Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size : 10px; } .image{ float : left; font-weight : bold; width : 210px; } .description{ float : right; width : 235px; } </style> </head> <body> <div style="width: 450px; background-color: #cc9; border: 1px dotted #333; padding: 5px; margin: 0px auto"> <div class="row"> <div class="image">An image will go here</div> <div class="description"> <strong>Heading:</strong> Text <br> <a href="http://www.somesite.com" target="_blank">http://www.somesite.com</a><br> <br> This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text.<br> <br> This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text.<br> <br> This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. This is some meaningless text. <br> <br> </div> </div> </div> </body> </html> It's a very simple example, but for some reason, the container doesn't "expand" in Firefox as I'd expect. I've hunted around the web, played around and tried some of my other code to no avail. Am I missing the simplest of attributes? Any help would be GREATLY appreciated. Thanks in advance! Hi all, The easiest way to see the problem is to look at this demo in firefox. (I haven't patched it to work in IE yet.) The menu items in the 1st 2 menu's don't expand to fill the available area. Any ideas? Hi all Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> <head> <title> new document </title> <style> div.outer { background-color: yellow; overflow: auto; } h1 { margin: 10px; } </style> </head> <body> <div class="outer"> <h1>Title</h1> </div> </body> </html> Expected result (Firefox): expected.JPG Unexpected result (Internet Explorer): unexpected.JPG Is there something I can do against this instead of adding a padding-top to the H1 or a padding-top to the div.outer? Thanks for help, Josh No worries, made an obvious error. Please delete this =) ( sorry for waste of moderators time ) Okay... I'm working more with CSS these days, and am trying to accomplish something that I can't figure out... I know that I can create a div, assign a specific size, and background image, and then inside that div, I can add an empty href tag with a display:block and height assigned, and the entire div is linked, the same as linking the image itself... What I'm trying to accomplish is the same thing, only with a div that has textual content.... I could throw the href tag outside the div, but it isn't valid XHTML 1.0, and throws warnings... I've tried display:block, and height as usual, and even tried throwing the z-index on top of the other items, and with a clear:none; but to no avail.... I hope this is a decent enough description of the problem... anyway to accomplish this??? Hi! I have a problem in Firefox with a layout located at: link removed. Please follow this path: Executive Furniture > Executive Desks > The Haydon Range - and then select a product. Don't open a new tab, refresh the page or resize the text and scroll down. There is a huge gap between the last 'related items' product and the card images. Now if you open a new tab, resize the text or refresh the page, the gap disappears and won't re-appear until you close the window and re-open the site in a new window (start a new session maybe). I have a feeling this has something to do with margins or it may just be a bug - I haven't a clue! The relevant CSS is situated at link removed. The main template layout is shared between the other CSS files in that directory, but they aren't relevant to that part of the layout. I apologise for it not being the most efficient CSS in the world . You'll have to "view source" for the HTML; and this I won't apologise for, because it's being spat out by the crappiest piece of shopping cart software ever. It took me 4 months to get it to validate (originally 850+ errors)! Anyway, if any of you could help me figure out why Firefox is displaying this big margin I would be eternally grateful. Cheers I've been looking through many, many forums trying to resolve this issue, so please forgive me if there is a solution to this that I've missed. Here's the deal: On some installs of Firefox (4.0), the body is being positioned 28px lower than the top of the screen. I set the <html> tag to have a light blue background to troubleshoot the issue, and now there is a light blue bar across the top of the page, proving that it is the body of the page that is lower than it should be. I thought it was a Firefox "collapsing margin" issue, so I added "margin:0; to almost everything, and it didn't help. I'm trying to do this without having to absolutely position everything. Here's the site: www-dot-myportlandtours-dot-com here's the css: www-dot-myportlandtours-dot-com/wp-content/themes/myportlandtours/style.css Anybody have insight into this? |