CSS - Css Dilemma With Heights And Position:absolute
Hi, and thanks for reading.
I have a design that I put together in Photoshop without thinking of what I would have to do to make it a reality and then got the okay on it. That was a mistake. I'm now stuck with this. Which is totally fine, but then you hit this, and everything sucks. The problem is he Code: #body {position:absolute; left:101px; top:13px; width:624px; height:100%;} #content {border:solid 3px #000000; background-color:#FFFFFF; width:613px; padding-left:80px;} #content is inside #body. I also have a transparent image I use as a placeholder with a height of 360px, which seems to only really work if I have height:100% in #content. The problem with that is then any page where the content is over 360px, like in the first link, overlaps #content even though it's all inside content as <p>, <table>, <form>, etc. My question is, what can I do to fix this? If there's nothing that will work on CSS 2, then I could always just add some extra lines at the bottom of pages with little content. Problem is, this is going to eventually be backed by a CM used by totally clueless people who won't understand the purpose of the extra lines even if I explained it. Any ideas? Thanks in advance, -colin Similar TutorialsI have having issues with IE displaying my page wrong. The page is http://]http://tampabay-online.org/cetr/about.php (or any page within that site) and the css can be found at http://tampabay-online.org/cetr/cetr.css It displays fine in Firefox and Opera but IE makes the content class lower from the top than the #right navigation bar (they should both be 20 pixels form the top) Any help much appreciated. Code: .content { position:relative; width:320px; margin-left: 125px; margin-top: 20px; border:1px solid black; background-color:white; padding:10px; z-index:3; } #right { position:absolute; width:200px; top:20px; left:500px; border:1px solid black; background-color:white; padding:10px; z-index:1; } Im trying to get an image to center in a div. It works as long as one part of my CSS is commented out. The issues is the part that is breaking it, is required for another script to run that I have not added in due to its vast amount of code. Can anyone tell me a workaround.. leaving the MUST have code in place. Im willing to add anything to the code, just not remove if possible. Full Code Code: <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> <html> <head> <style type="text/css"> #image { display: table-cell; text-align: center; vertical-align: middle; width:356px; height:356px; border:1px solid blue; } #image * { vertical-align: middle; } /*\*//*/ #image { display: block; } #image span { display: inline-block; height: 100%; width: 1px; } /**/ </style> <!--[if IE]><style> #image span { display: inline-block; height: 100%; } </style><![endif]--> <style type="text/css"> #image img {position:absolute;} </style> </head> <body> <div id="image"><span></span><img src="http://www.google.com/logos/olympics08_rhythm.gif"></div> </body> </html> Code that MUST stay in the CSS Code: #image img {position:absolute;} Just to note, the rest of the code is for the most part an exact dup of the cross-browser image center in div code here, http://www.brunildo.org/test/img_center.html If I do something like this: .divSubHomeRtPhoto { position: absolute; left: 340px; top: 167px; width: 420px; height: 420px; } Then <div class="divSubHomeRtPhoto"> my left and top positions don't seem to take in IE 5.2 for Mac. This seems to be fairly well known, from what I read on the internet. What this means for me though, is that I have to almost do away with positioning through CSS if I want my pages to work with IE 5.2 Mac, whcih I recently discoverd I do want to work. How do other cross browser CSS writes deal with this problem? Thanks for your help CJB IE browser seems fine but mozilla display a simple table with links inside in a squished up format, not present on the web design. Code: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN"> <html> <head> <meta name="GENERATOR" content="PageBreeze Free HTML Editor (http://www.pagebreeze.com)"> <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=ISO-8859-1" > <title>mybar.html</title> </head> <style type="text/css"> #elButton a { color: #000000; font-size:10px; font-family:verdana; font-weight:bold; text-decoration: none; /*border:1px outset aqua;*/ /* background-color:#00ffff;*/ border-right-style:solid; border-right-width:1px; width: 110px; /* padding: 3px 5px;*/ /*margin: 1px;*/ } </style> <body bgcolor="#ffffff"> <p> <table style="WIDTH: 487px; HEIGHT: 26px" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" width="487" align="right" bgcolor="#00eaea" border="0"> <tr> <td valign="top" align="middle"> <div id="elButton"> <a href="#">Java Script</a> <a href="#">Dynamic HTML</a> <a href="#">Server Side</a> <a href="#">Client Side</a> </div></td></tr></table></p> </body> </html> The question is "What is the positioning context of a div positioned absolutely (e.g., div#nav{position:absolute;}); that is, where is the 0,0 coordinate from which any offsets will be measured?" Is the answer "it will be measured from the top left"? I'm putting together a site using a CSS template, and hefty use of position: absolute. You can view it he http://www.goldenturmeric.com/layout.php The layout comes out great in FF 2.0 and IE 7. However, the main body of the site doesn't come out at all in IE 6. I've monkeyed around a little with changing to position: relative and a few other things and it completely throws it off. I'm sorry if I'm not doing this the right way or position: absolute is avoided or something. If so, I didn't know. Anyone's help is much appreciated. Is it possible to position something below a division that has the property { position: absolute } and can expand to a varied length depending on what is contained with it? Hi, I have a table with the following div : div#mod-banner { height:60px; position:absolute; right:180px; top:22px; width:468px; } in IE7 and Opera looks ok but in IE6 it shows it like its left aligned or something. I dont have any knowledge of CSS , can anybody help me? Thanks Hi css-ers, I wonder if anyone can tell me what I've done wrong. I have an absolutely positioned div that shows up perfectly in all browsers except IE 6 (I haven't tried it in IE7 yet). I have another abs pos div on the page that behaves perfectly. Any suggestions? This is the x/html: Code: <div id="logo"> <a href="index.html"></a> </div> This is the CSS: Code: #logo { left: 20px; top: 0px; position: absolute; z-index: 5; margin: 0pt; border: 1px solid #315185; } #logo a { background: transparent url(../images/logo.jpg) no-repeat scroll 0px 0px; display: block; height: 435px; width: 140px; } #logo a:hover { background: url(../images/logo.jpg) no-repeat scroll 0px -435px; display: block; height: 435px; width: 140px; } Thanks for any tips or references. Sorry for a link and not pasting but code but I want to be sure not to miss anything out ... There should be a menu item at the top of the page of: http://egg.epicdesigns.co.uk/home/index.php It shows up fine in Mozilla and Opera but not MSIE. Code: #menu { z-index:1; left:auto; top:272px; position:absolute; width:631px; margin:0px 0px 0px 12px; padding:0px; font:normal 110% agency fb,arial,sans-serif; } I notice that if I remove the <HEAD> tag int he HTML or the FLOAT:RIGHT styling on #sidebar then thigns show up as expected. Thanks in advance. Hi there, I have a show/hide div and want it to appear on top of my other layers, however, when I use absolute to get it to appear on top of the other layers, with left and top positions, it appears in different places when I resize my window or change my resolutions. Is there anyway to make it appear the same no matter what resolution or window size? I am using pixels by the way. Thanks. Hi everyone, I found how to position imgs and txt relative to the browser window, but when i print it out it will be like 3/4 inch from the edge of the paper, even though the page border is set at 1/2 ... Anyway I can get it closer? Found this piece of code from another page but didn't seem to work <STYLE TYPE="text/css" MEDIA="print"> thanks Alright, here we go again. The page in question... Various screenshots I'm working up a sample for a job I came across. The scenario: He wants a simple layout: top header, left column, mid (main), right column, and bottom header. The width of the body should be no more than 650 pixels and centered. However, he wants the html flow to be in order of: main, top header, left column, bottom header, right column. Obviously is going to require absolute positioning, right? So, using Win XP, I got it to look descent in IE 6, Net 7, and FF 1. Those are the three browser brands he's concerned about; the last two versions of each (didn't specify operating system). Basically, I'm just asking for someone to look at the source code and tell me if there's a simpler way. The way it's set up now, it renders poorly on several different versions of IE, Net, and Moz under other operating systems (which you can view in the screenshots URL above). Plus, the heights are not constant. Meaning that he will always be adding/changing content meaning he'll always have to mess with the positioning. Is this absolutely worthless? Problem is I don't want to give up because it is fun to learn (plus there's two other potential jobs behind it). It's starting to seem, however, that there will be no easy fix and perhaps the answer is unachievable in this situation. Any advice? Hi folks, Just got one of those "can I or can't I" questions that relates to position:relative and position:absolute. I have the following structure - Code: <div> <div style="position:relative"> <ul style="position:relative"> <li> <p> <span style="display:block"></span> <span style="display:block"></span> <span style="display:block; position:absolute"></span> </p> </li> </ul> </div> </div> The Third Span is where I am not sure about. I'd like it to sit at the bottom right of the enclosing <p>. When I use <span style="display:absolute; bottom:2px; right:2px>, the whole span disappears - not exactly sure where it vanishes to. Without the bottom and right declarations, the span stays put. There is sufficient space within the <p> for the <span> to move about. This absolute positioning worked fine without the relative div and relative ul - so I am assuming that's where my issue lies. BUT, I need the outer structure and it's not an option to change anything except the third <span>. Question is: Is what I am attempting going against the grain and something that just isn't going to work? If so, what steps can I take to position the contents of the <span> where I need it? I have tried making the <span> fit the width of the <p> and then positioning the internal contents to text-align:right. I can't do a padding-top or margin-top as the content in the second span is variable. Any clever ideas? ahh thanks figures it out never mind. 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 Please look at this page - http://www.mts-diesel.com/index.php?cPath=20_23_42 The breadcrumb trail links on the main page in FF are higher up than the same element in Chrome and IE. If anyone can shed some light it would be greatly appreciated. Thanks so much, Tom Please look at this page - http://casadelsol.tmhdesign.com/about.asp I have a div with an id of "header". In that div I placed this code Code: <div style="width:200px;height:200px;background-color:yellow;margin:0 0 -50px 400px;z-index:10000"> </div> As you can see it goes under the absolutely positioned div element with an id of top_header. I want to put a drop-down menu in the top header area but it slides under the top_header element. Can you help? Thanks |