I am using antd table for reactjs application.
I created Sandbox here for you to make changes.
Can anyone help me make rows with rounded borders like below image?
Expected :
I have tried adding rowClassName={() => "rowClassName1"} with border related css but borders won't show up.
Try this approach,
.rowClassName1 td:first-child {
border-top-left-radius: 10px;
border-bottom-left-radius: 10px;
}
.rowClassName1 td:last-child {
border-top-right-radius: 10px;
border-bottom-right-radius: 10px;
}
Working Demo :- https://codesandbox.io/s/antd-table-rounded-border-row-forked-9u4x9?file=/src/App.js
#UKS's answer solved the problem for me and able to make rows with rounded borders.
If someone wants to change header style as well with rows.
.monitorTableStyle .ant-table-container .ant-table-content table .ant-table-thead tr th:first-child{
border-top-left-radius: 15px !important;
border-bottom-left-radius: 15px !important;
}
.monitorTableStyle .ant-table-container .ant-table-content table .ant-table-thead tr th:last-child{
border-top-right-radius: 15px;
border-bottom-right-radius: 15px;
}
A client is requiring us to add a vertical line in between our angular material tabs. While this appears to be frowned upon, we cannot figure out how to accomplish this.
Here is an example:
Angular Material tabs
We've tried the angular md-divider but this only appears to work for vertical lists that need a horizontal line. Any help is appreciated.
It would be a mistake to add markup just for styling, in my opinion. I'd either use borders or pseudo-elements.
.md-tab {
border-right: 1px solid red;
}
Demo 1
.md-tab:after {
content: '';
position: absolute;
top: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
width: 3px;
background: green;
}
Demo 2
To hide the last tab's border you could add a class using Angular's $last and target that (or add it manually if you're not using ng-repeat).
ng-class="{'last-tab-class': $last}"
.md-tab.last-tab-class {
border-right: none;
}
add custom style to md-divider
<md-divider class="vertical-divider"></md-divider>
.vertical-divider {
border-top-width: 0;
border-right-width: 1px;
border-right-style: solid;
height: 100%;
}
I currently set the title attribute of some HTML if I want to provide more information:
<p>An <span class="more_info" title="also called an underscore">underline</span> character is used here</p>
Then in CSS:
.more_info {
border-bottom: 1px dotted;
}
Works very nice, visual indicator to move the mouse over and then a little popup with more information. But on mobile browsers, I don't get that tooltip. title attributes don't seem to have an effect. What's the proper way to give more information on a piece of text in a mobile browser? Same as above but use Javascript to listen for a click and then display a tooltip-looking dialog? Is there any native mechanism?
You can fake the title tooltip behavior with Javascript. When you click/tab on an element with a title attribute, a child element with the title text will be appended. Click again and it gets removed.
Javascript (done with jQuery):
$("span[title]").click(function () {
var $title = $(this).find(".title");
if (!$title.length) {
$(this).append('<span class="title">' + $(this).attr("title") + '</span>');
} else {
$title.remove();
}
});
CSS:
.more_info {
border-bottom: 1px dotted;
position: relative;
}
.more_info .title {
position: absolute;
top: 20px;
background: silver;
padding: 4px;
left: 0;
white-space: nowrap;
}
Demo: http://jsfiddle.net/xaAN3/
Here is a CSS only solution. (Similar to #Jamie Pate 's answer, but without the JavaScript.)
We can use the pseudo class :hover, but I'm not sure all mobile browsers apply these styles when the element is tapped. I'm using pseudo class :focus because I'm guessing it's safer. However, when using pseudo class :focus we need to add tabindex="0" to elements that don't have a focus state intrinsically.
I'm using 2 #media queries to ensure all mobile devices are targeted. The (pointer: coarse) query will target any device that the primary input method is something "coarse", like a finger. And the (hover: none) query will target any device that the primary pointing system can't hover.
This snippet is all that's needed:
#media (pointer: coarse), (hover: none) {
[title] {
position: relative;
display: inline-flex;
justify-content: center;
}
[title]:focus::after {
content: attr(title);
position: absolute;
top: 90%;
color: #000;
background-color: #fff;
border: 1px solid;
width: fit-content;
padding: 3px;
}
}
/*Semantic Styling*/
body {
display: grid;
place-items: center;
text-align: center;
height: 100vh;
}
a {
height: 40px;
width: 200px;
background: #fa4766;
color: #fff;
text-decoration: none;
padding: 10px;
box-sizing: border-box;
border-radius: 10px;
}
/*Functional Styling*/
#media (pointer: coarse), (hover: none) {
[title] {
position: relative;
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
[title]:focus::after {
content: attr(title);
position: absolute;
top: 90%;
color: #000;
background-color: #fff;
border: 1px solid;
width: fit-content;
padding: 3px;
}
}
<a title="this is the Title text" tabindex="0">Tag with Title</a>
Obviously, you'll need to open this on a mobile device to test it.
Here is a Pen with the same code.
Given that a lot of people nowadays (2015) use mobile browsers, and title still hasn't found a form of exposure in mobile browsers, maybe it's time to deprecate reliance upon title for meaningful information.
It should never be used for critical information, but it is now becoming dubious for useful information, because if that information is useful and cannot be shown to half the users, then another way of showing it to almost all users needs to be found.
For static pages, perhaps some visible text near to the relevant control, even as fine print. For server-generated pages, browser sniffing could provide that only for mobile browsers. On the client side, javascript could be used to trap the focus event, via bubbling, to show the extra text next to the currently focussed element. That would minimise the screen space taken up, but would not necessarily be of much use, since, in a lot of instances, bringing focus to a control can only be done in a way that immediately activates its action, bypassing the ability to find out about it before using it!
Over all though, it appears that the difficulties of showing the title attribute on mobile devices, may lead to its demise, mostly due to needing an alternative that is more universal. That is a pity, because mobiles could use a way to show such extra info on-demand, without taking up the limited screen space.
It seems strange that the w3c and mobile browser makers did not do anything about this issue a long time ago. At least they could have displayed the title text on top of the menu that appears when a long press on a control is made.
Personally, I wish it was placed at the top of a right-click/long-touch menu, as it won't timeout, and would be available on all browsers.
The other alternative is to construct footnotes, so an [n] type superscript is put next to the element/text needing more info, linking to explanatory text in a list at the bottom of the page. Each of those can have a similar [n] type link back to the original text/element. That way, it keeps the display uncluttered, but provides easy bidirectional swapping in a simple way. Sometimes, old print media ways, with a little hyperlink help, are best.
The title attribute has been hijacked by some browsers to provide help text for the pattern attribute, in that its text pops up if the pattern doesn't match the text in the input element. Typically, it is to provide examples of the right format.
Slightly more elaborated version of flavaflo's answer:
Uses pre-defined div as pop-up that can hold HTML, rather than reading from a title attribute
Opens/closes on rollover if mouse is used
Opens on click (touch screen) and closes on click on the open pop-up or anywhere else on the document.
HTML:
<span class="more_info">Main Text<div class="popup">Pop-up text can use <b>HTML</b><div></span>
CSS:
.more_info {
border-bottom: 1px dotted #000;
position: relative;
cursor: pointer;
}
.more_info .popup {
position: absolute;
top: 15px; /*must overlap parent element otherwise pop-up doesn't stay open when rolloing over '*/
background: #fff;
border: 1px solid #ccc;
padding: 8px;
left: 0;
max-width: 240px;
min-width: 180px;
z-index: 100;
display: none;
}
JavaScript / jQuery:
$(document).ready(function () {
//init pop-ups
$(".popup").attr("data-close", false);
//click on pop-up opener
//pop-up is expected to be a child of opener
$(".more_info").click(function () {
var $title = $(this).find(".popup");
//open if not marked for closing
if ($title.attr("data-close") === "false") {
$title.show();
}
//reset popup
$title.attr("data-close", false);
});
//mark pop-up for closing if clicked on
//close is initiated by document.mouseup,
//marker will stop opener from re-opening it
$(".popup").click(function () {
$(this).attr("data-close",true);
});
//hide all pop-ups
$(document).mouseup(function () {
$(".popup").hide();
});
//show on rollover if mouse is used
$(".more_info").mouseenter(function () {
var $title = $(this).find(".popup");
$title.show();
});
//hide on roll-out
$(".more_info").mouseleave(function () {
var $title = $(this).find(".popup");
$title.hide();
});
});
Demo here https://jsfiddle.net/bgxC/yvs1awzk/
As #cimmanon mentioned: span[title]:hover:after { content: attr(title) } gives you a rudimentary tooltip on touch screen devices. Unfortunately this has problems where the default ui behavior on touch screen devices is to select the text when any non-link/uicontrol is pressed.
To solve the selection problem you can add span[title] > * { user-select: none} span[title]:hover > * { user-select: auto }
A full solution may use some other techniques:
Add position: absolute background, border, box-shadow etc to make it look like a tooltip.
Add the class touched to body (via js) when the user uses any touch event.
Then you can do body.touched [title]:hover ... without affecting desktop users
document.body.addEventListener('touchstart', function() {
document.body.classList.add('touched');
});
[title] {
border-bottom: 1px dashed rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2);
border-radius:2px;
position: relative;
}
body.touched [title] > * {
user-select: none;
}
body.touched [title]:hover > * {
user-select: auto
}
body.touched [title]:hover:after {
position: absolute;
top: 100%;
right: -10%;
content: attr(title);
border: 1px solid rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.2);
background-color: white;
box-shadow: 1px 1px 3px;
padding: 0.3em;
z-index: 1;
}
<div>Some text where a portion has a <span title="here's your tooltip">tooltip</span></div>
Depending on how much information you want to give the user, a modal dialogue box might be an elegant solution.
Specifically, you could try the qTip jQuery plugin, which has a modal mode fired on $.click():
The title attribute is not supported in any mobile browsers **in a way that it would show the tooltip the same as to desktop mouse users** *(the attribute itself is ofcourse supported in the markup)*.
It's only basically for desktop users with a mouse, keyboard only users can't use it either, or screenreaders.
You can achieve almost similar with javascript as you said.
I was searching for an easy CSS only solution, and this is really the most easy one I found:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/balloon-css/balloon.min.css">
<span aria-label="Whats up!" data-balloon-pos="up">Hover me!</span>
Working example: https://jsfiddle.net/5pcjbnwg/
If you want to customize the tooltip, you find more info here:
https://kazzkiq.github.io/balloon.css/
To avoid using JavaScript, I used this CSS-only tooltip:
http://www.menucool.com/tooltip/css-tooltip
It works great in Mobile and Desktop, and you can customize the styles.
Thanks to #flavaflo for their answer. This works in most cases but if there is more than one title to lookup in the same paragraph, and one opens over the link to another, the unopened link shows through the first. This can be solved by dynamically changing the z-index of the title that has "popped up":
$("span[title]").click(function () {
var $title = $(this).find(".title");
if (!$title.length) {
$(this).append('<span class="title">' + $(this).attr("title") + '</span>');
$(this).css('z-index', 2);
} else {
$title.remove();
$(this).css('z-index', 0);
}
});
Also, you can make both the hover over display and the click display multiline by adding
(linefeed) to the title='' attribute, and then convert that to <br /> for the html click display:
$(this).append('<span class="title">' + $(this).attr("title").replace(/\\n/g, '<br />') + '</span>');
Extremely late to the party but for future visitors, here is a tweak of #Flavaflo's answer to fade the "tooltip" in and out
JQuery:
$(".more_info").click(function () {
var $title = $(this).find(".title");
if (!$title.length) {
$(this).append('<span class="title">' + $(this).attr("title") + '</span>');
} else {
$($title).fadeOut(250, function() {
$title.remove();
});
}
});
CSS:
.more_info {
border-bottom: 1px dotted;
position: relative;
}
.more_info .title {
position: absolute;
top: 20px;
background: green;
padding: 4px;
left: 0;
color: white;
white-space: nowrap;
border-radius:3px;
animation: fadeIn linear 0.15s;
}
#keyframes fadeIn {
0% {opacity:0;}
100% {opacity:1;}
}
Fiddle here: http://jsfiddle.net/L3paxb5g/
I know this is an old question, but i have found a CSS solution that works on mobile too, it doesn't use title at all and it's easy to implement, explained here:
https://www.w3schools.com/css/css_tooltip.asp
Explanation:
On mobile, with the touchscreen,the first input acts as css hover, so it works like a toggle tooltip when you press on it.
Code example:
.tooltip {
position: relative;
display: inline-block;
border-bottom: 2px dotted #666;
}
.tooltip .tooltiptext {
visibility: hidden;
width: 15em;
background-color: #555;
color: #fff;
text-align: center;
border-radius: 6px;
position: absolute;
z-index: 1;
bottom: 125%;
left: 50%;
margin-left: -8em;
opacity: 0;
transition: opacity 0.3s;
padding: 0.5em;
}
.tooltip .tooltiptext::after {
content: "";
position: absolute;
top: 100%;
left: 50%;
margin-left: -5px;
border-width: 5px;
border-style: solid;
border-color: #555 transparent transparent transparent;
}
.tooltip:hover .tooltiptext {
visibility: visible;
opacity: 1;
}
<div class="tooltip">Hover over me
<span class="tooltiptext">Tooltip text</span>
</div>
the Theme I am using (Plasma) has an option in the settings to display the users profile picture, but when I select it, it only shows the picture in the comments.
When I looked at the node.tpl.php in the theme it does not output the $user_picture variable.
So I tried adding this variable myself just below the <header> tag as it is in the comment.tpl.php but the image is displayed above the post, rather than inline with left alignment.
I tried wrapping the $user_picture in <align=left> </align> but this did not work.
So how do I show the picture as left aligned with the header and text of the post wrapped around the user profile picture.
Thanks
Simon
Here is the solution if you are using the the Plasma Theme, but it will probably work on most themes.
In the Theme folder edit the CSS file and add the following code
.node .user-picture{
float: left;
padding: 4px;
border: 1px solid #d9d9d9;
margin-right: 7px;
margin-bottom: 7px;
}
.content .user-picture{
float: left;
padding: 4px;
border: 1px solid #d9d9d9;
margin-right: 7px;
margin-bottom: 7px;
}
Then in your node.tpl.php add the following just above print render($content);
print $user_picture;
This will put the user picture at the top left of the content for every node and teaser. You can still turn off the user profile picture in the theme settings.
this is driving me crazy...might be something very simple and I just need another set of eyes to look at it...
I have this in my CSS:
#recipient {
width: 31%;
text-align: center;
min-height: 335px;
float: right;
background-color: #fff;
color: #000;
border: 2px solid black;
margin: 20px 0 0 0;
padding: 11px 0;
font-size: 0.875em;
}
and call it here in my HTML:
<div id="recipient">
<h3>Meet the 2010 Recipient!</h3>
<img src="images/2010_headshot.jpg" alt="foo" />
</div>
Pretty simple, right? In Firefox it renders about 20px longer in height than IE7 (I can tell by where the bottom of this div hits next to other elements on the page). I am running in standards mode, and have looked at the Firefox version in Firebug and the IE version with Firebug Light and the IE Dev Toolbar -- don't see anything weird in either... the top of the div starts in the right spot, so it doesn't look like the margin collapsing...
If I manually add padding/height to the CSS, I can get IE7 to line it up at the right height, but then the div in Firefox is too long! It's not a critical part of the design, but it's bugging the sh!t out of me!!
Thanks in advance...
It's IE and the different way it's handling the default h3 margins inside a floated element
usually this can be fixed by giving the offending element (any element which has default margins!) explicit margins, but in this case it's not working because of the top padding of the container ?
The best fix I can come up with is to remove the top padding from the #recipient div and explicit;y make the top/bottom margins on the h3 11px, this makes for nice even spaces through the effect (btw this extra bit only happens if the div is taller than the min height) - here's some working code - I also put a background color on the h3 which if you do in your code will show the 15px or so extra gap..
CSS:
#recipient {
width: 31%;
text-align: center;
min-height: 335px;
float: right;
background-color: #fff;
color: #000;
border: 2px solid black;
margin: 20px 0 0 0;
margin: 0;
font-size: 0.875em;
padding-bottom: 11px; /* bottom padding only */
}
h3 {
margin: 11px 0; /* explicitly set these */
background: #fcf;
}
HTML: (with placeholder image for testing)
<div id="recipient">
<h3>Meet the 2010 Recipient!</h3>
<img src="http://placekitten.com/350/200/" alt="foo" />
</div>