I'm building a new website and it will be a website with different layers. For the moment i'm thinking out the structure of my page and how they interact to each other.
For example I will use a person and a door. The person walks through the door. You will see that a piece of the door will be at front and an other piece at the back of the person.
To create this. I use z-index. Because everything moves around I want to set the door element in one div element and the person in another.
Here a code example
<div id="container">
<div id="bg"></div>
<div id="person" style='width:200px; height:200px; background:#000; position: absolute; z-index: 1;'></div>
<div id="action" style='width:300px; height:300px; position: absolute; top: 20px; left:20px;'>
<div id='frontofhouse' style='width:50px; height:50px; background:#FF0; position: absolute; z-index: 3; top: 20px; left:20px;' ></div>
<div 开发者_如何学JAVAid="actiontwo" style='width:300px; height:300px; background:#F00; position: absolute; top: 0px; left:0px; z-index:0;'></div>
</div>
</div>
Now, the problem is that I have the person (#person) in front. The door (#action) in back. But one element (#frontofhouse) needs to be in the front. If you play with the z-index everything will work nice in all browsers. But not in IE7.
Does anyone know a fix for this?
Thanks
IE7 is buggy with z-index
, see: IE7 Z-Index issue - Context Menu
In this case though, it seems to be difficult to fix without a lot of messing around.
Here's a version that looks the same (or close enough) in IE7 and modern browsers.
http://jsfiddle.net/thirtydot/ddXEA/
<div id="container" style="position:relative">
<div id="bg"></div>
<div id="person" style='width:200px; height:200px; background:#000; position: absolute; z-index: 1;'></div>
<div id="action" style='width:300px; height:300px;'>
<div id='frontofhouse' style='width:50px; height:50px; background:#FF0; position: absolute; z-index: 3; top: 30px; left:30px;' ></div>
<div id="actiontwo" style='width:300px; height:300px; background:#F00; position: absolute; top: 10px; left:10px; z-index:0;'></div>
</div>
</div>
would be much easier if you created some jsfiddle. Try adding z-index: 3
for an #action element
I found this solution. Try with position:relative.
You can fix that problem by remove 'action' div and adjust top, left of frontofhouse, actiontwo. Following is example:
<div id="container">
<div id="bg"></div>
<div id="person" style='width:200px; height:200px; background:#000; position: absolute; z-index: 4;'></div>
<div id="action" style='width:300px; height:300px; position: absolute; top: 20px; left:20px;'>
<div id='frontofhouse' style='width:50px; height:50px; background:#FF0; position: absolute; z-index: 5; top: 20px; left:20px;' ></div>
<div id="actiontwo" style='width:300px; height:300px; background:#F00; position: absolute; top: 0px; left:0px; z-index:0;'></div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="container2" style="position: absolute; top: 350px;">
<div id="bg2"></div>
<div id="person2" style='width:200px; height:200px; background:#000; position: absolute; z-index: 4; top: 0px; left: 0px;'></div>
<div id='frontofhouse2' style='width:50px; height:50px; background:#FF0; position: absolute; z-index: 5; top: 40px; left:40px;' ></div>
<div id="actiontwo2" style='width:300px; height:300px; background:#F00; position: absolute; top: 20px; left: 20px; z-index:0;'></div>
</div>
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