Rollover popup based on mouse click location - javascript

I need a rollover popup based on mouse click location (I cannot exactly use a CSS absolute positionined div inside a relative one for this, since that kind of crops my popup...reason being I have overflow:hidden for layout purpose)
So I cannot use this;
<div class="wrapper">
<ul class="popup"><li> item 1</li><li> item 2</li></ul>
<img src="someImg.gif" width="100" height="100"/>
</div>
.wrapper {
position: relative;
}
.popup {
display: none;
position: absolute;
bottom: 105px;
left: 10px;
}
.wrapper:hover .popup {
display: block;
}
So can I get something based on mouse cursor location and it should be completely fluid (no fixed "px" value and should adjust as the browser is resized)
Thank you.

well u are on the right way to prevent the cropping of pop up give the class css z-index of a 1000+ value n d class wrapper a z-index of less or -1 value

Related

How to show a dropdown when you hover over a specific area an on image? (HTML, CSS)

Is it possible to show a dropdown whenever you hover over some specific area on an image? For example, if my mouse is within 50,62 and 70,80. I already tried this with invisible boxes and divs, but the only way I could get them to overlay the image was with position properties, but they wouldn't stay in place if I reshaped or resized the screen. Any ideas?
Demo : http://jsfiddle.net/v8dp91jL/12/
The code is pretty self-explanatory.
Just two imp things:
Everything should be in %
the .dropdown is inside .hover-area so that when you move your mouse from .hover-area to .dropdown, .dropdown doesn't disappear because it is still technically inside .hover-area even tho it's visually not
You can add some hidden element (span) positioned on some specific area and it is going to trigger the hover:
HTML:
<div class="image-wrapper">
<span class="image-hover-trigger"></span>
<img src="..." >
<div class="dropdown"></div>
</div>
CSS:
.image-wrapper { position: relative; }
.image-hover-trigger { position: absolute; top: 20%; left: 20%; right: 20%; bottom: 20%; }
.dropdown { display: none; }
.image-hover-trigger:hover ~ .dropdown { display: block; }

css show button over image

I am making a simple reactjs app where I need to put a button over image.
My html looks like:
<div className={"panel-body"}>
<img className={"img-responsive center-block"}
src={album.photos.data[0].source} />
{(this.state.isMouseInsideID === album.id) ? <button>Your Button</button> : null}
</div>
Its all fine except button is shown below the image.
But I want to show the button over the image or in the middle of the div
How can I make this work ?
make button position relative and use z-index: maybe it will be helpful for you.
If you want to center the button in a div, while there is a background image to the div. I would suggest, to assign a background image for the div, rather than inserting an image into the div. Check out the fiddle:
http://jsfiddle.net/49s505sa/1/
HTML:
<div id="wrapper">
<button type="button">Your Button</button>
</div>
CSS:
#wrapper {
width: 100%;
height: 400px;
border: 1px solid black;
background: url('http://placehold.it/350x150') /*assign image, for demo purposes */
}
button {
height: 20px;
position: relative;
margin: -20px -50px;
width: 100px;
top: 50%;
left: 50%;
}
So, inside the render method
var style = {
backgroundImage: 'url(' + album.photos.data[0].source+ ')'
}
<div className={"panel-body"} style={style}>
{(this.state.isMouseInsideID === album.id) ? <button>Your Button</button> : null}
</div>
In this way, we will dynamically assign images to particular divs. And wont have to worry too much about styling.
Hope that helps!
Use z-index properties
The z-index property in CSS controls the vertical stacking order of
elements that overlap. As in, which one appears as if it is physically
closer to you. z-index only effects elements that have a position
value other than static (the default).. Note: z-index only works on
positioned elements
(position:absolute, position:relative, or position:fixed).
img {
position: absolute;
left: 0px;
top: 0px;
z-index: 10;
}

How to put an img element behind a transparent img element?

I have two img elements and I want the first image.png to go behind the transparent image.png. I have tried a lot of different things (z-index, transparent background color, rgba background color, positioning absolute and relative, nesting one in a div, making them both divs). Right now i've been trying to use a transparent .png image. The image .png is actually behind it, but it still shows through it. Please help.
html:
<body>
<main class="site-wrapper">
<div class="carnival"></div>
<div id="images">
<img id="divbox" src="images/divbox.png">
<img id="clown1" src="images/clown1.png">
</div>
</main>
</body>
js: (i did the styles in js b/c I was interested in learning how to do it that way):
//styles
//divbox:
document.getElementById('divbox').style.display = "inline-block";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.transform = "skew(-2deg)";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.marginTop = "21%";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.marginLeft = "47.6%";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.height = "200px";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.width = "200px";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.border = "1px solid orange";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.position = "absolute";
document.getElementById('divbox').style.zIndex = "2";
//clown1:
document.getElementById('clown1').style.display = "inline-block";
document.getElementById('clown1').style.transform = "rotate(90deg)";
document.getElementById('clown1').style.marginTop = "21%";
document.getElementById('clown1').style.marginLeft = "53%";
document.getElementById('clown1').style.border = "1px solid green";
document.getElementById('clown1').style.position = "relative";
document.getElementById('clown1').style.zIndex = "1";
Thanks for any help, please let me know if I can answer questions.
UPDATE:
Sorry for not being clearer. I have now achieved getting the image behind the other image, but since the image ontop is transparent, the image behind is showing. How do I stop this?
Here is an example of what is happening:
http://oi61.tinypic.com/2mw9egx.jpg
Notice the orange border is ontop so it is definitely ontop.
UPDATE 2:
This should make it really clear what I want. Again sorry for the confusion:
http://oi59.tinypic.com/eamb0n.jpg
I would do something like the following jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/7gdx48fu/. Might need to reload a couple times to see a good example of the overlay working.
Create a wrapper DIV for your two images. Set that wrapper DIV's to position: relative so we can use absolute positioning on one of the images it contains. By doing this we prevent the absolute positioned image from potentially aligning itself elsewhere in the page, like the upper left corner of the browser window.
Then, set the position of our overlay image, the transparent PNG, to position: absolute along with top: 0 and left: 0 to align it with the first images upper left corner.
You can do this without using z-index if you watch the order you include your images. Place the image you want behind the transparent PNG in the markup first followed by the transparent PNG.
<div class="img-container">
<img src="http://lorempixel.com/200/200/city/">
<img class="overlay" src="http://lorempixel.com/200/200/city">
</div>
.img-container {
position: relative;
}
.overlay {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
opacity: 0.25; /* using this to replicate the transparent PNG */
}
EDIT
The OP's requirements have changed to include how to prevent an image behind a transparent image from showing through the transparent image.
Here is an updated jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/7gdx48fu/2/.
This approach I wrapped the transparent PNG in a wrapper DIV and set it's background color. I used white in my example but you may use any color.
<div class="img-container">
<img src="http://lorempixel.com/200/200/city/">
<div class="overlay">
<img src="http://lorempixel.com/200/200/city">
</div>
</div>
.img-container {
position: relative;
}
.overlay {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
background-color: white;
top: 15px; /* shifting overlay for illustrative purposes - not use case code */
left: 15px; /* shifting overlay for illustrative purposes - not use case code */
}
.overlay img {
opacity: 0.25; /* using this to replicate the transparent PNG */
}
Not perfect but I'm unsure of how else to proceed.
EDIT 2
It seems the OP wants to do a form of masking. You can do this with overflow: hidden.
I have updated the jsFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/7gdx48fu/4/
In this updated answer I have kept the wrapper DIV and set it with a fixed width and height. Then applied overflow: hidden. What we are doing here is creating an invisible window that will only show content when it is within the dimensions of the window.
To have the image appear as if it is coming out of the base layer image simply adjust the position of the image inside the wrapper DIV. For the jsFiddle simply play with the value of top in .mask img.
This will need a little tweaking for the proper placement and size of the .mask DIV to fit your needs but hopefully points you in the right direction.
<div class="img-container">
<img src="http://lorempixel.com/200/200/city/">
<div class="mask">
<img src="http://lorempixel.com/200/50/city">
</div>
</div>
.img-container {
position: relative;
}
.mask {
position: absolute;
top: 25px;
left: 25px;
height: 100px;
width: 100px;
overflow: hidden;
border: 1px solid red; /* for illustrative purposes */
}
.mask img {
position: relative;
top: 25px;
}
Have you tried the css opacity property ?
#clown1{ opacity:0.3;}
make both images' position absolute instead of relative
for the above to work, some common ancestor (i.e. #images) must have a non-default position too (e.g. relative)
forget zIndex - all else being equal, the latter element will be "topmost"
put all the above in a CSS style sheet instead of in JS code!
Forgetting the other transformations and margins, etc, the core CSS that you need is:
#images {
position: relative;
}
#divbox, #clown1 {
position: absolute;
}
Put them both in a parent container. Make the parent have position: relative and put both images having position:absolute. That way they will stack.(Something like that that I didn't check The order of img's could be wrong - play around a bit.
CSS:
.parent > img.transparent {
position: absolute;
}
.parent > img {
position: absolute; opacity: 0.5
}
HTML:
<div class="parent" style="position:relative">
<img src="other.png" class="transparent"/>
<img src="transparent.gif"/>
</div>
Some more explanation: When you make a parent/ancestor element's position relative it means that its contents that are absolute will be relative to the parent and not to the whole window

Div Position: Fixed. Absolute when certain length away?

I'm currently making a website with a "Support is Live" div which will be following the user when scrolling. So I gave it Position: Fixed; and all works fine.
But when the user scrolls back up, I want the Support div to stop so it doesn't "touch" the header.
Here is a picture that hopefully makes it easier to understand:
http://gyazo.com/2694b03181a39c3b6673901b42b5952d
I want the yellow div to stop in line with the orange field on the picture. But when the user starts to scrolling down again, it will follow.
My Best Regards
Philip
This will need some JQuery to work properly:
JSFIDDLE
JQuery
$(document).on("scroll", function() {
if($(document).scrollTop() < 100) {
$('#alert').addClass("absolute");
} else if($(document).scrollTop() > 100) { //100 is the height of your header. Adjust if needed
$('#alert').removeClass("absolute");
}
});
CSS
.absolute {
top: 100px; //same as the value in the conditions
position: absolute;
}
#alert{
background-color: #FF0;
float: left;
height: 400px;
width: 230px;
margin-left: 20px;
position: fixed;
z-index:999;
}
HTML
<div id="alert" class="absolute"> </div>
/!-- add the class so that it doesn't mess up the layout when you load the page --!/
The srolltop function checks how much space is between your viewport and the top of your document. When it reaches the height of the header, a class absolute is applied in order to keep the #alert div in its place.

how to fix the position of div to bottom right of div containing background image

I have html sturcture
<div id="bg" class="layer">
<img id="trackmap" src="images/back_2416.jpg" width="1208" height="768" class=" ui-draggable map-icon" usemap="#main-map" data-zoom-image="images/background_zoom.jpg" data-big="images/background_zoom.jpg" style="position: relative; left: -439px; top: -272.6px; margin: 0px; display: inline-block; height: 1327.2px; width: 2088px;">
<div id="nav-text">LOREM IPSUM.</div>
</div>
Jquery
var windowHeight = $("#trackmap").height();
var windowWidth = $("#trackmap").width();
var text_height=((windowHeight)-(100));
$("#nav-text").css("top",windowHeight);
Css
.layer {
position: absolute;
width: 1208px;
height: 768px;
}
#nav-text{
z-index: 200;
color: white;
position: absolute;
font-size: 10px;
margin-left: 715px;
width: 310px;
height: 10px;
position: fixed;
bottom: 5px;}
I just want to fix the nav-text to the bottom right whatsoever.. Now i problem i am facing is theres zoom function on the trackmap.. which increases the height and width of the image ..so the text comes in between of the image ..intereferring with the image.. I have tried taking the image width height using jquery ..but somehow its not working
I am not sure I am following your issue here, but it sounds like you are trying to get a div to be in the bottom-right of another div no matter what size it is. That can be done by setting the parent div position to relative which you have, and the child div position to absolute. You have that set but then override it by setting the position to fixed lower in the CSS. You will also want to set the bottom to 0 and the right to 0.
This will position the child div to the bottom right of the parent div. Then you can get rid of your jQuery. Hopefully this helps.
Ok.. I am in a hurry to catch the bus.. but here's a fiddle that illustrates the idea..
basically you will need to use the scrolltop and left parameters to do so:
$(".container").on("scroll", function() {
$(".nav-text").css("top", $(this).prop("scrollTop") + 130);
$(".nav-text").css("left", $(this).prop("scrollLeft") + 120);
});
but move the scrolls first.. sorry I need to go now..
You can achieve this by not fixing the .layer width and height, using display:inline-block; to prevent the div from filling the whole container width. At that point, the .layer size will match the image size whatever it is.
Finally you just need to set the text to absolute position and bottom and right properties too.
.parent{
display:inline-block;
position:relative;
}
.children{
position:absolute;
bottom:0;
right:0;
}
Here is the fiddle explaining
And here is the proof it works even if the image size is changed(click on the image).
Fiddle 2

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