Enforce key size on virtual keyboard - javascript

This is the layout I am trying to achieve: https://jsfiddle.net/h0oa3Lps/ All keys are the same size.
In my application I have this code. The js is at the bottom of my jade file:
$('.keyboard')
.keyboard({
layout: 'custom',
customLayout: {
'default' : [
'1 2 3 {c}',
'4 5 6 {b}',
'7 8 9 {dec}',
'{left} {right} 0 {a}'
]
},
maxLength : 6,
restrictInput : true,
useCombos : false,
acceptValid : true,
validate : function(keyboard, value, isClosing){
// only make valid if input is between 0 and 100 inclusive
return value >= 0.0 && value <= 100.0;
}
})
.addTyping();
When using css/keyboard.min.css, the left arrow, right arrow and backspace keys are slightly larger than the other keys. Also the text positioning is off. Image:
If I switch to css/keyboard-basic.min.css the arrow keys are the same size as regular keys but the esc, backspace, and accept keys are twice the size as the regular keys. Also this takes up half of the screen (since it's not using the jquery-ui positioning). Image:
How do I enforce uniform key size?
If it makes any difference I am using Node, Express and Foundation v5.5.3 plus I have just updated to the latest versions of jQuery, jQuery-ui and jQuery.keyboard.

To fix this issue I copied the unminified css of keyboard.css to a keyboard-butchered.css. I then started experimenting with the styles in keyboard-basic.css and eventually came up with the following that partially answered my question:
.ui-keyboard {
/* adjust overall keyboard size using "font-size" */
font-size: 28px; /* increase button size for small screen */
text-align: center;
background: #fefefe;
border: 1px solid #aaa;
padding: 4px;
/* include the following setting to place the
keyboard at the bottom of the browser window */
left: 0px;
top: auto;
/*position: fixed;*/
position: absolute;
white-space: nowrap;
overflow-x: auto;
/* see issue #484 */
-ms-touch-action: manipulation;
touch-action: manipulation;
}
I then mixed in the style for the keyboard button. This gives the correct style as seen in the jsfiddle demo (but jumbo sized).
.ui-keyboard-button {
border: 1px solid #aaa;
padding: 0 0.5em;
margin: 1px;
min-width: 3em;
height: 3em;
line-height: 3em;
vertical-align: top;
font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
color: #333;
text-align: center;
border-radius: 5px;
-webkit-box-shadow: 1px 1px 3px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
box-shadow: 1px 1px 3px 0 rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
background: white;
background-image: -webkit-linear-gradient(-90deg, white 0%, #e3e3e3 100%);
background-image: linear-gradient(-90deg, white 0%, #e3e3e3 100%);
cursor: pointer;
overflow: hidden;
-moz-user-focus: ignore;
}

Related

Webkit scrolling too much?

I have some content which can have only specific height (no more), and I added some scroll on that content.
This is my CSS:
.value {
max-height: 60px;
overflow-y: auto;
color: black;
font-size: 16px;
}
/* width */
.value::-webkit-scrollbar {
width: 3px;
}
/* Track */
.value::-webkit-scrollbar-track {
box-shadow: inset 0 0 5px rgb(163, 163, 163);
border-radius: 5px;
}
/* Handle */
.value::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb {
background: linear-gradient(60deg, #b95aca, #8c15ad);
border-radius: 5px;
}
And This is my Subtitle content:
<div
class="value"
*ngIf="courseData.sub_title"
> {{courseData.sub_title}}
</div>
This is the image:
So, when I want to scroll down or up using mouse wheel it's scrolling too much and user can not be able read full text (part of text was going up or down with scrolling).
How can I change scroll step?

Auto changing size buttons by css

I have a "step manual" for auto-diagnosis but i have a little problem with auto-changing size buttons by (probably) CSS.
When I go click first sequence: Do you have a fever -> yes -> do you have a cough -> go to doctor
Next I click "reset" and do second sequence: Do yo have a fever -> yes -> Do you have a cough... and here buttons are smallest than first time.
Where I make mistake in code?
/*buttons*/
#msform .action-button {
width: 100px;
background: #27AE60;
font-weight: bold;
color: white;
border: 0 none;
border-radius: 1px;
cursor: pointer;
padding: 10px 5px;
margin: 10px 5px;
}
#msform .action-button:hover, #msform .action-button:focus {
box-shadow: 0 0 0 2px white, 0 0 0 3px #27AE60;
}
JSFiddle
Screens
The buttons and the container as a whole are shrinking because of a scaling down to 0.8 of their original sizes in your javascript code.
Remove this line from your JS:
current_fs.css({'transform': 'scale('+scale+')'});
Updated fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/nashcheez/bj8pd5op/31/
scale = 1 - (1 - now) * 0.2;
This causes your whole fieldset to shrink down to 0.8.
You probably added it for the scaling effect.
Two solutions :
Remove the line (as mentioned by #nashcheez ) or set the scale to 1
If you want still want the scale effect using css animations to restore the scale back to it's original size ( aka 1 )
#keyframe scaleAwayToGlory {
0% {
transform: scale(0.8);
}
100% {
transform: scale(1);
}
}

How to make a Ruler scale in HTML of an overall fixed size but which can be divided into required no. of sections by taking user input

I am making a Ruler scale using html, css, js, whose length is supposed to be fixed always. On clicking the scale, between any two bars, a prompt will be generated and the user will then input a number which signifies the no. of sections by which the scale length (between any two bars) will be divided in equal parts and get displayed on it.
e.g. if initially the scale is |_____|_____|_____| , then on clicking 2nd bar and entering divide by 2, the scale should look like|_____|__|__|_____|
I referred to the following link for making the ruler:
How to make a ruler scale in HTML and CSS
But in the answer given in the above link, the user has to manually change the value of the "data-items" attribute, to make different no. of sections every different time, and also, on changing its value, the overall size of the scale also increases, which contradicts my case.
This is what I have coded so far and I really don't know how to split any bar on user input without changing the overall length.
https://jsfiddle.net/yoshi2095/pvjhLggz/9/
HTML:
<div>
<ul class="ruler" data-items="10"></ul>
</div>
CSS:
.ruler, .ruler li {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
list-style: none;
display: inline-block;
}
/* IE6-7 Fix */
.ruler, .ruler li {
*display: inline;
}
.ruler {
background: lightYellow;
box-shadow: 0 -1px 1em hsl(60, 60%, 84%) inset;
border-radius: 2px;
border: 1px solid #ccc;
color: #ccc;
margin: 0;
height: 3em;
padding-right: 1cm;
white-space: nowrap;
}
.ruler li {
padding-left: 1cm;
width: 2em;
margin: .64em -1em -.64em;
text-align: center;
position: relative;
text-shadow: 1px 1px hsl(60, 60%, 84%);
}
.ruler li:before {
content: '';
position: absolute;
border-left: 1px solid #ccc;
height: .64em;
top: -.64em;
right: 1em;
}
/* Make me pretty! */
body {
font: 12px Ubuntu, Arial, sans-serif;
margin: 20px;
}
div {
margin-top: 2em;
}
JS:
function inputNumber() {
var inputNum = prompt("Divide by");
$("a").attr("data-items",inputNum);
}
$(function() {
// Build "dynamic" rulers by adding items
$(".ruler[data-items]").each(function() {
var ruler = $(this).empty(),
len = Number(ruler.attr("data-items")) || 0,
item = $(document.createElement("li")),
i;
for (i = 0; i < len; i++) {
ruler.append(item.clone().text(i + 1));
}
});
});
Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

Adding a rounded similar to border-radius to outline [duplicate]

Is there any way of getting rounded corners on the outline of a div element, similar to border-radius?
I had an input field with rounded border and wanted to change colour of focus outline. I couldn't tame the horrid square outline to the input control.
So instead, I used box-shadow. I actually preferred the smooth look of the shadow, but the shadow can be hardened to simulate a rounded outline:
input, input:focus {
border: none;
border-radius: 2pt;
box-shadow: 0 0 0 1pt grey;
outline: none;
transition: .1s;
}
/* Smooth outline with box-shadow: */
.text1:focus {
box-shadow: 0 0 3pt 2pt cornflowerblue;
}
/* Hard "outline" with box-shadow: */
.text2:focus {
box-shadow: 0 0 0 2pt red;
}
<input class="text1">
<br>
<br>
<input type=text class="text2">
I usually accomplish this using the :after pseudo-element:
of course it depends on usage, this method allows control over individual borders, rather than using the hard shadow method.
you could also set -1px offsets and use a background linear gradient (no border) for a different effect once again.
body {
margin: 20px;
}
a {
background: #999;
padding: 10px 20px;
border-radius: 5px;
text-decoration: none;
color: #fff;
position: relative;
border: 2px solid #000;
}
a:after {
content: '';
display: block;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
right: 0;
border-radius: 5px;
border: 2px solid #ccc;
}
Button
Similar to Lea Hayes above, but here's how I did it:
div {
background: #999;
height: 100px;
width: 200px;
border: #999 solid 1px;
border-radius: 10px;
margin: 15px;
box-shadow: 0px 0px 0px 1px #fff inset;
}
<div></div>
No nesting of DIVs or jQuery necessary, Altho for brevity I have left out the -moz and -webkit variants of some of the CSS. You can see the result above
Use this one:
box-shadow: 0px 0px 0px 1px red;
I wanted some nice focus accessibility for dropdown menus in a Bootstrap navbar, and was pretty happy with this:
a.dropdown-toggle:focus {
display: inline-block;
box-shadow: 0 0 0 2px #88b8ff;
border-radius: 2px;
}
Visit Stackoverflow
We may see our wishes soonish by setting outline-style: auto It's on WebKits radar: http://trac.webkit.org/changeset/198062/webkit
See ya in 2030.
You're looking for something like this, I think.
div {
-webkit-border-radius: 10px;
-moz-border-radius: 10px;
border-radius: 10px;
border: 1px solid black;
background-color: #CCC;
height: 100px;
width: 160px;
}
Edit
There is a Firefox-only -moz-outline-radius properly, but that won't work on IE/Chrome/Safari/Opera/etc. So, it looks like the most cross-browser-compatible way* to get a curved line around a border is to use a wrapper div:
div.inner {
-webkit-border-radius: 10px;
-moz-border-radius: 10px;
border-radius: 10px;
border: 1px solid black;
background-color: #CCC;
height: 100px;
width: 160px;
}
div.outer {
display: inline-block;
-webkit-border-radius: 10px;
-moz-border-radius: 10px;
border-radius: 10px;
border: 1px solid red;
}
<div class="outer">
<div class="inner"></div>
</div>
*aside from using images
Firefox 88+: border-radius
From April 2021 you will be able to use a simple CSS for Firefox:
.actual {
outline: solid red;
border-radius: 10px;
}
.expected {
border: solid red;
border-radius: 10px;
}
In Firefox 88+,
<span class="actual">this outline</span>
should look like
<span class="expected">this border</span>
Current behaviour in Firefox 86.0:
Webkit: no solution
Using outline-style: auto will tell the «user agent to render a custom outline style»: see [MDN](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/outline-style(.
Webkit-based browsers will then draw the outline over the border, when you use outline-style: auto. It's difficult to style it properly.
.actual {
outline: auto red;
border-radius: 10px;
}
.expected {
border: solid red;
border-radius: 10px;
}
In WebKit browsers (Chrome, Edge),
<span class="actual">this outline</span>
should look close to
<span class="expected">this border</span>
Current behaviour in Chrome 89.0:
More information
From Firefox 88 (to be released April 20 2021), outline will follow the shape of border-radius.
The current -moz-outline-radius will become redundant and will be removed.
See MDN's entry about -moz-outline-radius:
From Firefox 88 onwards, the standard outline property will follow the shape of border-radius, making -moz-outline-radius properties redundant. As such, this property will be removed.
(Feb 2023)
As far as I know, the Outline radius is only supported by Firefox and Firefox for android.
-moz-outline-radius: 1em;
I just found a great solution for this, and after looking at all the responses so far, I haven't seen it posted yet. So, here's what I did:
I created a CSS Rule for the class and used a pseudo-class of :focus for that rule. I set outline: none to get rid of that default light-blue non-border-radius-able 'outline' that Chrome uses by default. Then, in that same :focus pseudo-class, where that outline no longer exists, I added my radius and border properties. Leading to the following
outline: none;
border-radius: 5px;
border: 2px solid maroon;
to have a maroon-colored outline with a border radius that now appears when the element is tab-selected by the user.
If you want to get an embossed look you could do something like the following:
.embossed {
background: #e5e5e5;
height: 100px;
width: 200px;
border: #FFFFFF solid 1px;
outline: #d0d0d0 solid 1px;
margin: 15px;
}
.border-radius {
border-radius: 20px 20px 20px 20px;
-webkit-border-radius: 20px;
-moz-border-radius: 20px;
-khtml-border-radius: 20px;
}
.outline-radius {
-moz-outline-radius: 21px;
}
<div class="embossed"></div>
<div class="embossed border-radius"></div>
<div class="embossed border-radius outline-radius">-MOZ ONLY</div>
I have not found a work around to have this work in other browsers.
EDIT: The only other way you can do this is to use box-shadow, but then this wont work if you already have a box shadow on that element.
Chrome 94.0+
I tested it in chrome 94.0 and it seems that the outline property honors the border-radius now.
.outline {
outline: 2px solid red;
}
.border {
border: 2px solid red;
}
.outline-10 {
border-radius: 10px;
}
.border-2 {
border-radius: 2px;
}
.outline-2 {
border-radius: 2px;
}
.border-10 {
border-radius: 10px;
}
.outline-50 {
border-radius: 50%;
}
.border-50 {
border-radius: 50%;
}
.circle {
display: inline-block;
width:50px;
height: 50px;
}
<strong>Test this in chrome 94.0+</strong>
<br/><br/>
border-radius: 2px
<span class="outline outline-2">outline</span>
<span class="border border-2">border</span>
<br/><br/>
border-radius: 10px
<span class="outline outline-10">outline</span>
<span class="border border-10">border</span>
<br/><br/>
border-radius: 50%
<span class="outline outline-50">outline</span>
<span class="border border-50">border</span>
<span class="outline circle outline-50">outline</span>
<span class="border circle border-50">border</span>
As others have said, only firefox supports this. Here is a work around that does the same thing, and even works with dashed outlines.
.has-outline {
display: inline-block;
background: #51ab9f;
border-radius: 10px;
padding: 5px;
position: relative;
}
.has-outline:after {
border-radius: 10px;
padding: 5px;
border: 2px dashed #9dd5cf;
position: absolute;
content: '';
top: -2px;
left: -2px;
bottom: -2px;
right: -2px;
}
<div class="has-outline">
I can haz outline
</div>
No. Borders sit on the outside of the element and on the inside of the box-model margin area. Outlines sit on the inside of the element and the box-model padding area ignores it. It isn't intended for aesthetics. It's just to show the designer the outlines of the elements. In the early stages of developing an html document for example, a developer might need to quickly discern if they have put all of the skeletal divs in the correct place. Later on they may need to check if various buttons and forms are the correct number of pixels apart from each other.
Borders are aesthetic in nature. Unlike outlines they are actually apart of the box-model, which means they do not overlap text set to margin: 0; and each side of the border can be styled individually.
If you're trying to apply a corner radius to outline I assume you are using it the way most people use border. So if you don't mind me asking, what property of outline makes it desirable over border?
COMBINING BOX SHADOW AND OUTLINE.
A slight twist on Lea Hayes answer
I found
input[type=text]:focus {
box-shadow: 0 0 0 1pt red;
outline-width: 1px;
outline-color: red;
}
gets a really nice clean finish. No jumping in size which you get when using border-radius
There is the solution if you need only outline without border. It's not mine. I got if from Bootstrap css file. If you specify outline: 1px auto certain_color, you'll get thin outer line around div of certain color. In this case the specified width has no matter, even if you specify 10 px width, anyway it will be thin line. The key word in mentioned rule is "auto".
If you need outline with rounded corners and certain width, you may add css rule on border with needed width and same color. It makes outline thicker.
I was making custom radio buttons and the best customisable way i've found is using pseudo elements like this: Codepen
/*CSS is compiled from SCSS*/
.product-colors {
margin-bottom: 1em;
display: flex;
align-items: center;
}
.product-colors label {
position: relative;
width: 2.1em;
height: 2.1em;
margin-right: 0.8em;
cursor: pointer;
}
.product-colors label:before {
opacity: 0;
width: inherit;
height: inherit;
padding: 2px;
border: 2px solid red;
border-radius: 0.2em;
content: "";
position: absolute;
z-index: 1;
background: transparent;
top: -4px;
left: -4px;
}
.product-colors input {
position: absolute;
opacity: 0;
width: 0;
height: 0;
}
.product-colors input:checked + label:before, .product-colors input:focus + label:before {
opacity: 1;
}
<div class="product-colors">
<input type="radio" name="cs" id="cs1" value="black">
<label for="cs1" style="background:black"></label>
<input type="radio" name="cs" id="cs2" value="green">
<label for="cs2" style="background:green"></label>
<input type="radio" name="cs" id="cs3" value="blue">
<label for="cs3" style="background:blue"></label>
<input type="radio" name="cs" id="cs4" value="yellow">
<label for="cs4" style="background:yellow"></label>
</div>
clip-path: circle(100px at center);
This will actually make clickable only circle, while border-radius still makes a square, but looks as circle.
The simple answer to the basic question is no. The only cross-browser option is to create a hack that accomplishes what you want. This approach does carry with it certain potential issues when it comes to styling pre-existing content, but it provides for more customization of the outline (offset, width, line style) than many of the other solutions.
On a basic level, consider the following static example (run the snippent for demo):
.outline {
border: 2px dotted transparent;
border-radius: 5px;
display: inline-block;
padding: 2px;
margin: -4px;
}
/* :focus-within does not work in Edge or IE */
.outline:focus-within, .outline.edge {
border-color: blue;
}
br {
margin-bottom: 0.75rem;
}
<h3>Javascript-Free Demo</h3>
<div class="outline edge"><input type="text" placeholder="I always have an outline"/></div><br><div class="outline"><input type="text" placeholder="I have an outline when focused"/></div> *<i>Doesn't work in Edge or IE</i><br><input type="text" placeholder="I have never have an outline" />
<p>Note that the outline does not increase the spacing between the outlined input and other elements around it. The margin (-4px) compensates for the space that the outlines padding (-2px) and width (2px) take up, a total of 4px.</p>
Now, on a more advanced level, it would be possible to use JavaScript to bootstrap elements of a given type or class so that they are wrapped inside a div that simulates an outline on page load. Furthermore, event bindings could be established to show or hide the outline on user interactions like this (run the snippet below or open in JSFiddle):
h3 {
margin: 0;
}
div {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
.flex {
display: flex;
}
.clickable {
cursor: pointer;
}
.box {
background: red;
border: 1px solid black;
border-radius: 10px;
height: 5rem;
display: flex;
align-items: center;
text-align: center;
color: white;
font-weight: bold;
padding: 0.5rem;
margin: 1rem;
}
<h3>Javascript-Enabled Demo</h3>
<div class="flex">
<div class="box outline-me">I'm outlined because I contain<br>the "outline-me" class</div>
<div class="box clickable">Click me to toggle outline</div>
</div>
<hr>
<input type="text" placeholder="I'm outlined when focused" />
<script>
// Called on an element to wrap with an outline and passed a styleObject
// the styleObject can contain the following outline properties:
// style, width, color, offset, radius, bottomLeftRadius,
// bottomRightRadius, topLeftRadius, topRightRadius
// It then creates a new div with the properties specified and
// moves the calling element into the div
// The newly created wrapper div receives the class "simulated-outline"
Element.prototype.addOutline = function (styleObject, hideOutline = true) {
var element = this;
// create a div for simulating an outline
var outline = document.createElement('div');
// initialize css formatting
var css = 'display:inline-block;';
// transfer any element margin to the outline div
var margins = ['marginTop', 'marginBottom', 'marginLeft', 'marginRight'];
var marginPropertyNames = {
marginTop: 'margin-top',
marginBottom: 'margin-bottom',
marginLeft: 'margin-left',
marginRight: 'margin-right'
}
var outlineWidth = Number.parseInt(styleObject.width);
var outlineOffset = Number.parseInt(styleObject.offset);
for (var i = 0; i < margins.length; ++i) {
var computedMargin = Number.parseInt(getComputedStyle(element)[margins[i]]);
var margin = computedMargin - outlineWidth - outlineOffset;
css += marginPropertyNames[margins[i]] + ":" + margin + "px;";
}
element.style.cssText += 'margin:0px !important;';
// compute css border style for the outline div
var keys = Object.keys(styleObject);
for (var i = 0; i < keys.length; ++i) {
var key = keys[i];
var value = styleObject[key];
switch (key) {
case 'style':
var property = 'border-style';
break;
case 'width':
var property = 'border-width';
break;
case 'color':
var property = 'border-color';
break;
case 'offset':
var property = 'padding';
break;
case 'radius':
var property = 'border-radius';
break;
case 'bottomLeftRadius':
var property = 'border-bottom-left-radius';
break;
case 'bottomRightRadius':
var property = 'border-bottom-right-radius';
break;
case 'topLeftRadius':
var property = 'border-top-left-radius-style';
break;
case 'topRightRadius':
var property = 'border-top-right-radius';
break;
}
css += property + ":" + value + ';';
}
// apply the computed css to the outline div
outline.style.cssText = css;
// add a class in case we want to do something with elements
// receiving a simulated outline
outline.classList.add('simulated-outline');
// place the element inside the outline div
var parent = element.parentElement;
parent.insertBefore(outline, element);
outline.appendChild(element);
// determine whether outline should be hidden by default or not
if (hideOutline) element.hideOutline();
}
Element.prototype.showOutline = function () {
var element = this;
// get a reference to the outline element that wraps this element
var outline = element.getOutline();
// show the outline if one exists
if (outline) outline.classList.remove('hide-outline');
}
Element.prototype.hideOutline = function () {
var element = this;
// get a reference to the outline element that wraps this element
var outline = element.getOutline();
// hide the outline if one exists
if (outline) outline.classList.add('hide-outline');
}
// Determines if this element has an outline. If it does, it returns the outline
// element. If it doesn't have one, return null.
Element.prototype.getOutline = function() {
var element = this;
var parent = element.parentElement;
return (parent.classList.contains('simulated-outline')) ? parent : null;
}
// Determines the visiblity status of the outline, returning true if the outline is
// visible and false if it is not. If the element has no outline, null is returned.
Element.prototype.outlineStatus = function() {
var element = this;
var outline = element.getOutline();
if (outline === null) {
return null;
} else {
return !outline.classList.contains('hide-outline');
}
}
// this embeds a style element in the document head for handling outline visibility
var embeddedStyle = document.querySelector('#outline-styles');
if (!embeddedStyle) {
var style = document.createElement('style');
style.innerText = `
.simulated-outline.hide-outline {
border-color: transparent !important;
}
`;
document.head.append(style);
}
/*########################## example usage ##########################*/
// add outline to all elements with "outline-me" class
var outlineMeStyle = {
style: 'dashed',
width: '3px',
color: 'blue',
offset: '2px',
radius: '5px'
};
document.querySelectorAll('.outline-me').forEach((element)=>{
element.addOutline(outlineMeStyle, false);
});
// make clickable divs get outlines
var outlineStyle = {
style: 'double',
width: '4px',
offset: '3px',
color: 'red',
radius: '10px'
};
document.querySelectorAll('.clickable').forEach((element)=>{
element.addOutline(outlineStyle);
element.addEventListener('click', (evt)=>{
var element = evt.target;
(element.outlineStatus()) ? element.hideOutline() : element.showOutline();
});
});
// configure inputs to only have outline on focus
document.querySelectorAll('input').forEach((input)=>{
var outlineStyle = {
width: '2px',
offset: '2px',
color: 'black',
style: 'dotted',
radius: '10px'
}
input.addOutline(outlineStyle);
input.addEventListener('focus', (evt)=>{
var input = evt.target;
input.showOutline();
});
input.addEventListener('blur', (evt)=>{
var input = evt.target;
input.hideOutline();
});
});
</script>
In closing, let me reiterate, that implementing this approach may require more styling than what I have included in my demos, especially if you have already styled the element you want outlined.
outline-style: auto has had full browser support for ages now.
Shorthand is:
outline: auto blue;
This let's you set a custom color, but not a custom thickness, unfortunately (although I think the browser default thickness is a good default).
You can also set a custom outline-offset when using outline-style: auto.
outline: auto blue;
outline-offset: 0px;
you can use box-shadow instead of outline like this
box-shadow: 0 0 1px #000000;
border-radius: 50px;
outline: none;
Try using padding and a background color for the border, then a border for the outline:
.round_outline {
padding: 8px;
background-color: white;
border-radius: 50%;
border: 1px solid black;
}
Worked in my case.
I just set outline transparent.
input[type=text] {
outline: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0);
border-radius: 10px;
}
input[type=text]:focus {
border-color: #0079ff;
}
I like this way.
.circle:before {
content: "";
width: 14px;
height: 14px;
border: 3px solid #fff;
background-color: #ced4da;
border-radius: 7px;
display: inline-block;
margin-bottom: -2px;
margin-right: 7px;
box-shadow: 0px 0px 0px 1px #ced4da;
}
It will create gray circle with wit border around it and again 1px around border!

CSS triangle side with round on left? PART 2

This is what it should look like:
(source: kerrydeaf.com)
span.trig_italic2{color:#000000; line-height:17px;font-size:12px;font-family:opensansitalic;
width: 100px;
height: 36px;
background: #FFCC05;
position: relative;
-moz-border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
-webkit-border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
margin-right:50px;
padding:3px 4px 3px 4px;}
span.trig_italic2:before
{
content:"";
display:block;
position: absolute;
right: -22.5px;
top:0;
width: 0;
height: 0;
border: 11px solid transparent;
border-color: transparent transparent #FFCC05 #FFCC05;
}
Here is a jsfiddle:
http://jsfiddle.net/alma/zQKhb/2/
The problem is its hard to have rectangular box with corners to align the triangle as above?
It is for iphone app using Hybrid coding.
UPDATE: #andyb. Thank you for the update and this is what I see as below:
(source: kerrydeaf.com)
UPDATE: #andyb. It is now solved and a screen shot from iOS 6 stimulator.
(source: kerrydeaf.com)
UPDATE: Question: How do I move a yellow box down and touch the box a light blue box without leaving a gap?
(source: kerrydeaf.com)
UPDATE: Answer: It is now solved: added this margin-bottom:-8.5px on span.trig_italic2 CSS and it worked. (Image is not included)
Instead of creating a yellow triangle, how about creating a white triangle to chop off the end?
This does rely on making the <span> a bit wider, since the end will be taken up with the white triangle. So the span can be given display:inline-block in order for the width to take affect. I also had to give the height a smaller value and make the line-height equal to the font-size to keep the text vertically aligned in the middle of the block.
Edit: Since the background is a non-solid colour, an alternate approach would be to use a linear-gradient to chop off the end. The (slight) drawback to this approach is that the start of the chopping off point is hard-coded in the CSS and will not adapt to variable width content.
Updated demo (Webkit only)
span.trig_italic2 {
color:#000000;
line-height:12px;
font-size:12px;
font-family:opensansitalic;
width:136px;
display:inline-block;
height: 12px;
background: #FFCC05;
position: relative;
-moz-border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
-webkit-border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
margin-right:50px;
padding:3px 4px 3px 4px;
background:-webkit-linear-gradient(45deg, #FFCC05 100px, transparent 100px);
}
The original answer which works with solid colour backgrounds is left below.
Original demo (Webkit only)
span.trig_italic2 {
color:#000000;
line-height:12px;
font-size:12px;
font-family:opensansitalic;
width:136px;
display:inline-block;
height:12px;
background: #FFCC05;
position: relative;
-moz-border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
-webkit-border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
border-radius:5px 0 0 5px;
margin-right:50px;
padding:3px 4px 3px 4px;
}
span.trig_italic2:after {
content:"";
display:block;
position: absolute;
right:0;
top:0;
width:0;
border:12px solid transparent;
border-color:#fff #fff transparent transparent;
}
​
The problem is in padding that increases box size unless you set box-sizing to border-box.
I would do this: http://jsfiddle.net/zQKhb/9/

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