My client wants me to create a textarea inside where there has to be a button like the below picture:
Into the above pictue please follow into the right side of the picture where you can see blue color braces which is the button.
This has to be work like this 2nd picture on-click (like drop down):
Into the 2nd pictue we can see that upon clicking on the braces button the list has opened and clicking on an option from the list is writing on the Textarea. But this whole thing should work in client side i.e. using Javascript or Jquery in which I'm quite new at. So, I could not start on this. I need your wise suggestion on the above regarding how may I achieve the following meanwhile I'm also doing my research if I get to know anything then I will update my question or answer my question for other. Thanks in advance.
To achieve this you can place both the textarea and button within the same div which has position: relative set on it. You can then make the button position: absolute and put it in the top right. Something like this:
.textarea-container {
position: relative;
}
.textarea-container textarea {
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
box-sizing: border-box;
}
.textarea-container button {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
right: 0;
}
<div class="textarea-container">
<textarea name="foo">Some content here...</textarea>
<button>Menu</button>
</div>
I'll leave the styling for you to finalise as required.
Here's a version more or less as you asked, however, due to the fact that the container-div for the menu will have to be placed outside the textarea, there isn't really a way for it to dynamically fit to the textarea using only CSS - so for that you will have to use JavaScript.
* {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
#textareamenu_content ul,#textareamenu {
display: none;
}
#textarea_container {
position: relative;
display: inline-block;
}
#textarea_container label {
background: blue;
color: white;
padding: .2em;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
right: 0;
padding: .2em;
}
#textareamenu:checked ~ #textareamenu_content {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
right: 0;
overflow-y: scroll;
max-height: 15em;
min-height: 12em;
min-width: 10em;
border-left: 1.4em solid blue;
z-index: 99;
}
#textareamenu:checked ~ #textareamenu_content ul {
display: block;
}
textarea {
min-height: 15em;
min-width: 40em;
}
#textareamenu:checked ~ label {
position: absolute;
right: 8.6em;
top: 0;
width: 1.4em;
z-index: 100;
}
<div id="textarea_container">
<textarea name="text"></textarea>
<input type="checkbox" id="textareamenu">
<label for="textareamenu">{}</label>
<div id="textareamenu_content">
<ul>
<li>First_Name</li>
<li>Last_Name</li>
</ul>
</div>
</div>
Related
Objective:
I would like the Header, Tab Section, and the Radio Button Section to be fixed in a form (see image below). Meaning that they should always be in view, and never have any overlapping elements.
The form looks like the following:
This is working fine when I simply scroll down on the form:
The Problem:
When I open the Angular Material dropdown, it overlaps over the Radio Button Section:
Here is the HTML. The highlighted sections are the elements that I want to be fixated on the form:
And here is the CSS for the 3 sections
//Header:
.module__header {
position: fixed;
top: 0px;
z-index: 1001;
display: flex;
height: 35px;
width: 100%;
background-color: #082749;
color: #FFFFFF;
font-size: 14px;
font-weight: 500;
align-items: center;
justify-content: stretch;
padding: 0;
margin-bottom: 0;
}
// Tab Section:
.mat-tab-label-container {
position: fixed;
top: 35px;
padding-top: 10px;
z-index: 1001;
width: 100%;
background: #fff;
}
// Radio Button Section:
.timaticFullTextView {
padding-top: 35px;
padding-left: 15px;
padding-bottom: 15px;
background: #fff;
z-index: 1001;
position: fixed;
width: 100%;
border-bottom: 1.5px solid gray;
}
I have tried changing the cdk-overlay-container to a z-index of <1001, but that still is overlapping the Radio Button Section.
How can I have the opened dropdown display underneath all 3 sections?
Edit: Adding screenshot to show the cdk-overlay that is giving issues. I have tried removing and lowering the z-index, but it doesn't have any effect
The problem is that mat-tab-body has z-index: 1 and this won't allow your fixed view inside to have a higher elevation. You can remove the z-index from mat-tab-body put then your content without a z-index won't be clickable anymore so you have to add a z-index and position to your not fixed content.
The code would have to look something like this:
<mat-tab>
<mat-tab-body> <!-- <-- added automatically -->
<div class="tab-header"></div>
<div class="tab-content"></div>
</mat-tab-body>
</mat-tab>
::ng-deep mat-tab-body {
z-index: unset !important;
}
.tab-header {
position: fixed;
z-index: 1001;
}
.tab-content {
position: relative;
z-index: 1;
}
You've found the right element whilst applying styles to the wrong one.
Here is how I made it work
.cdk-global-overlay-wrapper, .cdk-overlay-container {
z-index: 99999 !important;
}
Is it possible to give the hover-icon a class, so that the icon is the triggerinfo? The image is in gray when i hover it, it gets colored but I wan't to hover a text when is colored, when I going over the little icon. Is there a way overlapping the div with the triggerinfo class over the image, but not leaving the hover of the image. Like hover the div that is not visible and not leaving the hover effect colored ?
Thanks !
If it helps I can share the link to my website, but only as message not for the public post. It gets more visual, and I think better to understand what I mean.
jQuery(document).ready(function() {
jQuery(".triggerinfo").mouseleave(function() {
jQuery(this).next(".info").hide();
});
jQuery(".triggerinfo").hover(function() {
jQuery(this).next(".info").toggle("fade");
});
});
.info {
display: none;
padding: 10px;
background: #fff;
position: absolute;
box-sizing: border-box;
z-index: 1;
}
.triggerinfo {
display: inline-felx;
opacity: 0.1;
position: absolute;
margin-top: -50px;
margin-left: 30px;
z-index: 3;
}
.uk-overlay-icon:before {
content: "\f0c9";
position: absolute;
top: 90%;
left: 10%;
width: 30px;
height: 30px;
margin-top: -15px;
margin-left: -15px;
font-size: 30px;
line-height: 1;
font-family: FontAwesome;
text-align: center;
color: #f69c00;
}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="https://maxcdn.bootstrapcdn.com/font-awesome/4.6.3/css/font-awesome.min.css">
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div data-uk-filter="dsgf" data-grid-prepared="true" style="position: absolute; box-sizing: border-box; padding-left: 10px; padding-bottom: 10px; top: 0px; left: 0px; opacity: 1;">
<div class="uk-panel">
<div class="uk-panel-teaser">
<figure class="uk-overlay uk-overlay-hover ">
<img src="/wp-content/uploads/bilder/projekte/dsf.jpg" class="uk-overlay-grayscale" alt="dfsg">
<div class="uk-overlay-panel uk-overlay-icon uk-overlay-fade"></div>
<a class="uk-position-cover" href="/wp-content/plugins/widgetkit/cache/nuding-35281426b204ba8667e05928e60e8a11.jpg" data-lightbox-type="image" data-uk-lightbox="{group:'.wk-1b2a'}" title="dsfg"></a>
</figure>
</div>
<div>
<div class="triggerinfo">
sdf
</div>
<div class="info">
<h5>dsfg</h5>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
The Fiddlejsfiddle.net/e8qd8gvf/3/ works now as it should on my site. Now the thing is: on hover the img get colored and it appears a little icon in the bottom left coner, the trigger that is now under the img should be this little icon, because the icon is from the css definition in uk-overlay-icon (from the font awesome)
I dont now how to set the info class on this icon.
Or I was trying put an div with the info class over the img at the position of the icon and than trigger it, but than the colored effekt dont show when I trigger it, so I thought there must be a way to trigger the div on hover and not lose the colored effect, so the trigger div would trigger the Info and musst trigger the hover from the img at the same time
PS: Sorry for the long css !
The <figure> element is intended to mark up diagrams, illustrations, photos, code examples and similar content, "that can be moved away from the main flow of the document without affecting the document’s meaning" (http://w3c.github.io/html-reference/figure.html).
Your way of using it seems to be against this specification.
It's your own responsibility to code according to specification and best practices.
I just opted with your provided example: https://jsfiddle.net/e8qd8gvf/4/
I moved the uk-overlay-icon outside of the figure, added the toggle-info class and put the info box inside it.
All that was left was adding some CSS:
.uk-position-cover { cursor: default; }
.uk-panel-teaser { position: relative; }
.toggle-info {
display: none;
cursor: pointer;
position: absolute; bottom: 20px; left: 20px;
width: 30px; height: 30px;
}
.toggle-info > .info {
width: 150px; height: 150px;
border: 2px solid red;
position: absolute; bottom: -20px; left: 10px;
transform: translateY(100%);
}
.toggle-info, .info { display: inline-block !important; }
.toggle-info.hidden, .info.hidden { display: none !important; }
as well as changing your JS to:
jQuery(document).ready(function() {
jQuery(".uk-overlay").hover(
function() {
jQuery(this).next(".toggle-info").removeClass("hidden");
},
function() {
jQuery(this).next(".toggle-info").addClass("hidden");
}
);
jQuery(".toggle-info").hover(
function() {
jQuery(this)
.removeClass("hidden")
.children(".info").removeClass("hidden");
},
function() {
jQuery(this)
.addClass("hidden")
.children(".info").addClass("hidden");
}
);
});
My solution is only showing you a way to accomplish things and is by far not "nice". You need to adapt it yourself and to specifications.
I've searched high and low but can't find a solution to this exact problem.
On a desktop browser, when the user hovers over an image, a div appears and they can click the link within the div if they want. However, on a mobile device, the hover is triggered by a click. If the user clicks in just the right spot, even though the div isn't visible yet, they can accidentally click the anchor and navigate away from the page. (In other words, the div goes from display:none to display:block at the same time that the link is clicked.)
I want to prevent that accidental click from happening on mobile browsers, however I still want the link to be usable once the div is visible.
My code:
<style>
.staffpic {
position: relative;
width: 33.33333%;
height: auto;
}
.staffpic:hover .popup {
display: block;
}
.staffpic img {
display: block;
width: 110px;
height: 110px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
.popup {
display:none;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
left: -5px;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
box-sizing: border-box;
padding: 15px;
background-color: rgba(255, 153, 0, 0.9);
color: #fff;
text-transform: uppercase;
}
</style>
<div class="staffpic">
<img src="/wp-content/uploads/image.jpg" />
<div class="popup">
John Smith, Director<br/>
CityName | Email John
</div>
</div>
Any ideas? HTML, CSS, JS and jQuery solutions are all welcome! (Maybe something more clever than what I can think of using pointer-events:none along with some jQuery?)
I'm actually about to encounter the same problem in a project, and jotted down a potential solution. Haven't tested it yet but it might help you out. The link should only trigger if the element has a display that's not 'none':
var popup = $('.popup'),
display = popup.css('display');
if (!(display === 'none')) {
popup.on('click', function(e) {
e.preventDefault();
});
}
I found a solution but it's not elegant. I wanted to post it in case someone has this problem in the future and just needs something that will work!
I added a fake link in a span with the real link then set new display styles for it and the real link based on the parent span is being hovered over.
<style>
.staffpic {
position: relative;
width: 33.33333%;
height: auto;
}
.staffpic:hover .popup {
display: block;
}
.staffpic img {
display: block;
width: 110px;
height: 110px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
.staffpic a {
display: none; /* Added */
}
.staffpic.link:hover a {
display: inline; /* Added */
}
.staffpic.link:hover .fakelink {
display: none; /* Added */
}
.popup {
display:none;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
left: -5px;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
box-sizing: border-box;
padding: 15px;
background-color: rgba(255, 153, 0, 0.9);
color: #fff;
text-transform: uppercase;
}
</style>
<div class="staffpic">
<img src="/wp-content/uploads/image.jpg" />
<div class="popup">
John Smith, Director<br/>
CityName | <span class="link">Email John<span class="fakelink">Email John</span></span>
</div>
</div>
I'd still love a cleaner solution without all this added html if someone has it.
I have a script that is dived as:
HTML:
<div id="wrapper">
<div id="container">
<div id="button">Click me!</div>
<form>
<input type="file" />
</form>
</div>
<div id="notice">File is uploaded!</div>
</div>
JavaScript(JQuery 2):
$(document).ready(function () {
$("input").on("change", function () {
$("div#notice").fadeIn();
//$("form").submit(); //If you want it to submit on your site uncomment this
});
});
CSS:
div#wrapper {
background-color: #ccc;
position: absolute;
width: 300px;
height: 200px;
}
div#wrapper > form > input {
color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0);
zoom: 1;
filter: alpha(opacity=0);
opacity: 0;
color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0);
}
div#container {
width: 200px;
height: 20px;
overflow: hidden;
}
div#button, input {
position: absolute;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
cursor: pointer;
}
div#button {
z-index: 1;
background-color: #AAA;
}
input {
z-index: 2;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0);
opacity: 0;
alpha: filter(opacity=0);
font-size: 25px;
color: rgba(0,0,0,0);
filter: alpha(opacity=0);
zoom: 1;
}
div#notice
{
background-color: green;
display: none;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0px;
left: 0px;
}
Note: This issue was there before blur was put to hide the flashing icon in IE.
In Chrome and Firefox the button only requires a single click. In IE 10 it requires a double click, which I don't want. I am trying to think of a way to make it single click.
The only thing I've tried so far is to .render("click") on the input, but that didn't work.
JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/plowdawg/mk77W/
I had the same problem and found different approach. I just made that button be as big as I need with font-size on it. Then person simply can't click on text section.
<div class="divFileUpload">
<input class="fileUpload" type="file" />
</div>
and css:
.divFileUpload {
background-color: #F60;
border-radius: 5px;
height: 50px;
margin-left: auto;
margin-right: auto;
overflow: hidden;
position: relative;
width: 50%
}
.fileUpload {
cursor: pointer;
font-size: 10000px; /* This is the main part. */
height: 100%;
opacity: 0;
position: absolute;
right: 0;
top: 0;
width: 100%
}
To follow up on what SDLion said....
This might be what you see
But really on top of that there is a file upload control that has been made transparent.
Clicking on the browse button brings up the file upload dialog with one click.
In IE You have to double click the text box to the left of it if you want to see the file upload dialog.
Increase the font size of the file input to fill the button image
While #bastos.sergio is right about it happening in the text section there is a way to get around this if you are comfortable using JavaScript.
You will need:
A wrapper div tag
An inner dev tag
Some sort of form input
JQuery (tested on 2.1)
Steps:
Create the "wrapper" div
Create an inner "button " div
Place the form element underneath the inner "button" div
Set the "wrapper" and "inner" divs to the same size
Set overflow:hidden on the wrapper
Create a JQuery script for the "inner" div setting the on click function
In the "inner" function click function call .click() on the input
Seems to work for me in IE 10.
$(document).ready(
function()
{
$("#open_dialog").on("click",function()
{
$("input").click();
});
$("input").on("change",function()
{
alert($("input"));
$("#notice").html("uploading");
});
});
#open_dialog
{
position: relative;
width: 200px;
height: 50px;
color: white;
font-family: "Arial";
font-size: 14pt;
text-align: center;
top: 25px;
margin-top: -.5em;
z-index: 1;
}
#wrapper
{
width: 200px;
height: 50px;
overflow: hidden;
cursor: pointer;
border-radius: 10px;
background: green;
z-index: 0;
}
input
{
margin-top: 100px;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div id="wrapper">
<div id="open_dialog">Click Me</div>
<input type="file" />
</div>
<div id="notice">Nothing to upload</div>
The double click is happening on the text portion of the file upload, like #TravisPessetto stated.
Since it's not possible to hide/remove the text portion out of the file input control, I recommend that you put a regular button over the file input.
See here for more details.
I found another more simple solution, just trigger the event "click" on mousedown for this element only:
$("input").mousedown(function() {
$(this).trigger('click');
})
in order to avoid problems on other browsers, apply this solution to IE only:
if ($.browser.msie && parseInt($.browser.version, 10) > 8) {
$("#your_file_input").mousedown(function(event) {
if (event.which == 1) {
$(this).trigger('click');
}
})
}
here's your jfiddle modified, check it on IE 9-10:
http://jsfiddle.net/7Lq3k/
Edit: example modified in order to limit the event handling for left click only
(see: How to distinguish between left and right mouse click with jQuery for details)
I mixed various solutions to get this one that works for me (on every browser). It's written using LESS nesting.
HTML
<!--/* Upload input */-->
<div class="input-file">
Select image
<input type="file" />
</div>
LESS CSS
/*
* Input "file" type Styling
* Based on http://goo.gl/07sCBA
* and http://stackoverflow.com/a/21092148/1252920
*/
.input-file {
position: relative;
overflow: hidden;
margin: 10px;
input[type="file"] {
opacity: 0;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
cursor: pointer;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
font-size: 10000px;
}
// For Chrome
input[type=file]::-webkit-file-upload-button {
cursor: pointer;
}
}
Check this jsFiddle.
The orange bar is serving as a progress bar where the value under the circle is how high the progress bar should be.
Any idea why the overflow:hidden; is beeing disregarded and how do one solve this problem? Oblviously nothing should go outside the circle.
Also is there a better solution for this?
Modified your fiddle a little bit. Here is the link
Modifications:
Changed .outerContainer css to display:block from display:table and addedmargin-top:30px to p css
Check if this works for you.
position: absolute and overflow: hidden don't appear to be playing nicely with display: table/table-cell. Removing the table stuff you had in there to vertically center the text fixes the problem. In Firefox, at least.
I think it's the browser thing...
This is the CSS3 version...
.progressBar {
display: block;
width: 100%;
height: 0;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
background: #ec6730;
transition: height 1s;
}
.innerContainer:hover > .progressBar {
height: 300px;
}
http://jsfiddle.net/ZyhgT/2/
It no longer flashing 'cause browser handle the job (not js loop animation...). But still it shows the edge on animation finish!!! This could be the browser things... Could be a bug...
This is not related to jQuery or any javascript. In fact, if you delete all your javascript and manipulate the height of your .progressBar using css on li:hover, you will notice the bug anyway.
It appears to be a browser issue as reported on: https://code.google.com/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=157218
As a workaround try adding an imperceptible css transform to the mask element:
.outerContainer {
-webkit-transform: rotate(0.000001deg);
}
You just need to change your .outerContainer class and it works just fine!
.outerContainer {
position: relative;
display: block;
height: 96px;
width: 96px;
overflow: hidden;
background: #fff;
border: 2px solid #fff;
-webkit-border-radius: 50px;
border-radius: 50px;
}
Put the level class inside the outerContainer div and style the span inside the level class to be relatively positioned. In the JavaScript, to calculate the level, divide by 10 instead of 100 for the perfect circular hover effect.
Here is a fiddle.
HTML
<div class="outerContainer">
<div class="innerContainer">
<p>Circle 3</p>
<span class="progressBar"></span>
</div>
<div class="level"><span>75</span>
</div>
</div>
CSS
body {
background: blue;
}
#circles {
text-align: center;
margin: 100px 0;
}
li {
display: inline-block;
margin: 0 10px;
position: relative;
}
.outerContainer {
position: relative;
display: block;
height: 96px;
width: 96px;
overflow: hidden;
background: #fff;
border: 2px solid #fff;
-webkit-border-radius: 50px;
border-radius: 50px;
}
.innerContainer {
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: middle;
width: 100%;
margin: 0 auto;
text-align: center;
}
p {
color: #000;
width: 96px;
position: relative;
z-index: 2;
}
.progressBar {
display: block;
width: 100%;
height: 0;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
background: #ec6730;
}
.level span{
position:relative;
}
JS
$(function() {
$("#circles li").hover(function(){
var thisElement = $(this);
var level = $(this).find(".level").text();
var elementHeight = $(this).find(".outerContainer").height();
level = (level/10)*elementHeight;
$(thisElement).find(".progressBar").stop().animate({
height: level
}, 300);
}, function() {
var thisElement = $(this);
$(".progressBar").stop().animate({
height: 0
}, 300);
});
});
display: table doesn't work that good with CSS positioning;
you should avoid using that, and find some other way to vertically center your labels.
If your circles have a known height, like your code seems to indicate (height:96px ecc), then just use a fixed top position for an absolutely positioned <p> element:
http://jsfiddle.net/ZyhgT/5/
Note that you don't even need jQuery for this, it is all achievable with just CSS3 (unless you are targeting old browsers)