I can't find information how to disable left column in component (administrator submenu) in the code. Actually I would like to override to whole view and left only top menu.
How can I do that?
Just unpublish every module pointed to the sidebar that you want to hide.
a bit tricky could be, if you hide the DIV with id: j-sidebar-container in the CSS file of Isis template.
jroot/administrator/templates/isis/css/template.css
#j-sidebar-container {
display: none;
}
Related
So, previously I was using the 'ml-auto' class for my navbar, for my dropdown to push itself all the way over to the left. However, I don't want it to push itself all the way to the left when it goes into a small screen, and the navbar changes into a vertical orientation.
I tried giving my NavDropdown the following class and ID:
className={styles.naviDropdown}
id='navigationDropdown'
and apply the following style to it
.naviDropdown#navigationDropdown {
margin-left: auto !important;
}
#media (max-width: 768px) {
.naviDropdown#navigationDropdown {
margin-left: 0 !important;
}
}
So, this seems like it would work perfectly well, but unfortunately, it does not. Doing this makes the website completely disregard any of the CSS, and makes my navbar look all wacky and evenly spaced, as opposed to justifying my links left, and navbar right.
I've found out, through the inspector, that for some reason, the id is being applied to the a element generated by React Bootstrap, not the encompassing div, which is given the proper class.
Any ideas what might be going on?
Any help would be much appreciated, and let me know if I need to provide more info!
Edit:
I tried reformatting my code in the ways specified within this Github discussion, and unfortunately, my issue still remains the same--the ID is assigned to the 'a' element, rather than the dropdown div.
Looks like all i needed to do was surround the dropdown element with a 'div' element and then apply the id to that. There might be some deeper issue at play here, but this fixed my issue.
Is there any way to target some components from react-bootstrap in CSS. For my application, I'm using Modals from react-bootstrap and I need to change some style on all of them and it will be annoying if I need to change every single one individually.
Yes, it is possible, however you will need to inspect the Modal using ChromeDevTools or the like and see what classes are applied to the Modal when it is displayed. For example, when I inspected the Modal from react-bootstrap, I noticed the styles applied to the heading were given the className of "modal-header". So I created a Modal.css file and added the following code to it:
.modal-header {
background-color: red;
}
Then, I imported "./Modal.css" into the Modal.js file or wherever you've defined or using your Modal. Finally, when I opened the Modal, the heading had a background of red color so to speak.
Please note that it can be a little difficult to override bootstrap styles sometimes.
When I use lightning inline editable data table component, the status bar would cover the edit panel.
I think it might is a SLDS bug.
I ran into this problem as well. I agree that I think it is a CSS issue on the SLDS side.
I'm using a lightning:datatable with inline editing, and I noticed that the footer bar div with the Cancel/Save buttons is using the 'slds-docked-form-footer' class, which sets the z-index at 8000.
Crawling up from the datepicker I noticed that the "table cell" contains a section element that has inline styling setting the z-index to 7002. That section element also has a class of "slds-popover_edit", so my workaround solution was to put this into my lightning component's css file:
.THIS section.slds-popover_edit {
z-index: 9999 !important;
}
Hope this helps, or that you've found a better solution by now. I'm going to test my page to make sure this change didn't have any unintended consequences.
I've successfully created a responsive menu using Angular UI Bootstrap. The problem is:
When the responsive menu is open it can only be closed by re-clicking the toggle. Clicking anywhere else on the page keeps the menu open, which is undesirable for the site I'm building.
I'm looking for this functionality:
Clicking anywhere except the menu should close the menu, not toggle it.
How would one go about achieving this? I tried setting an ng-click on the html or body elements and seeing if that would work, but it didn't.
This actually fairly simple to solve with a little extra CSS and an added div.
Plunker Demo
The mechanics of this solution are pretty straightforward: Add an extra div to the navbar markup that serves as a clickable backdrop when the menu is expanded.
CSS:
.backdrop {
position: fixed;
top: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
background-color: transparent;
z-index: -1;
}
To make sure that the backdrop covers the entire viewport, you'll use position: fixed and set the top, right, bottom and left properties to 0. Then you'll need to make sure that the backdrop doesn't cover the menu, rendering your menu items un-clickable. To do this, you need to set its z-index to -1. Finally, to make sure it's 'clickable' you need to give it a background. Setting the background-color to transparent makes sure that it doesn't obscure any of the navbar elements.
The next thing you need to do is ensure that the backdrop element is only displayed when the menu is expanded, otherwise it would cover your body content and make it impossible to interact with any of the content. The cool thing is that the ngClass directive makes this simple. You can use the isCollapsed scope variable to determine when to add the backdrop class by setting the expression to isCollapsed === false. Lastly, add an ng-click attribute to close the menu. So, the markup looks like the following:
MARKUP:
<div ng-class="{backdrop: isCollapsed === false}" ng-click="isCollapsed = !isCollapsed"></div>
When the backdrop class is not added, the div--which has no content--will naturally collapse to a height of 0, so there's actually no need to hide or show it.
Just remember that the backdrop div has to be added to the same element that is handled by your controller that manages the collapse state of the menu. If it can't access the isCollapsed scope variable, it won't display and the ng-click event will have no effect.
You can easily improve this by creating a simple custom directive, so that you don't have to add the div in your markup. Just set the scope property of the directive to true so that the directive has access to the parent isCollapsed variable.
I have a button in AngularJS. It's in a row of other buttons. How can I show and hide this button but still have it use space? I tried using ng-show but then when the button is hidden it uses no space and all the other buttons around it move.
In your CSS, target the element like this:
.my-element.ng-hide {
display: block!important;
visibility: hidden;
}
(You might want inline-block or something else for the display, the important part is to override the none default value of ng-hide)
You can then use ng-show="showMyElement" as an attribute as per usual