I have a page where I have a menu to the left and to the right I have a new section with a lot of text. The text is positioned correc开发者_JAVA技巧tly to start with, but as soon as the text goes below the left menu's height, the text is positioned more to the left.
I understand that this is because the section is floating (please correct me if I'm wrong) to the left and positioned according to paddings and margins. But how do I do if I want to keep the left vertical line of the text in my right section? If I use absolute positioning, the "footer" (which is another div-section) is moved way up and overlaps the text. By defining the height of the left menu as higher than than the text, I do get a nice vertical text-line, but it's difficult to know where to position the footer section.
Please see my code below. I tried to copy only what's needed, hope I didn't miss anything.
Thanks in advance!
html:
<div id="container">
<div id="subsections">
<h4>Games</h4>
<ul id="subnav">
<li><a href="games.html#theGame">The Game</a></li>
</ul>
</div><!-- END #subsections -->
<hr />
<div id="maincontent">
<h3>Welcome</h3>
<div id="welctext">
<p>Welcome to this site. Here you can find information about the applications that this company has developed. You can subscribe to information about new or updated applicaionts here.</p>
<p>This company is a small company that focus on developing application that can be used on the a mobile device. Presently the focus is on iPhone. Here you can find out what applications that are available right now. More to come...</p>
</div><!-- END #welctext -->
</div><!-- END #maincontent -->
<hr/>
<div id="footer">
<p> © Some company name</p>
</div><!-- END #footer -->
</div><!-- END #container -->
</body>
</html>
css:
body {
/*background-color: #333;*/
/*background-color: #98310d;*/
background-color: #d7e6f1;
background-image: url(../images/graphics/back-tile.jpg);
color: #4b5dcb;
font-family: "Apple Braille", "Trebuchet MS", Helvetica, Arial, Verdana, sans-serif;
font-size: 0.9em;
margin: 0;
padding: 0 0 0 0px;
/* IE auto center fix */
text-align: left;
}
#container {
line-height: 1.6em;
margin: 0 auto 0 auto;
width: 720px;
padding: 20px 0px 0px 50px;
text-align: justify;
float: left;
}
#maincontent {
margin: 0px 0px 0px 50px;
padding: 0;
}
#subscribe {
margin: 0px 0px 0 220px;
padding: 0;
text-align: left;
}
#subsections {
float: left;
margin-bottom: 40px;
width: 220px;
/*height: 1300px;*/
}
ul#subnav {
list-style: none;
margin: 0;
padding: 14px 0 0 10px;
}
div#footer {
border-top: 1px solid #FFF;
clear: both;
font-size: .75em;
line-height: 1.3em;
margin-bottom: 40px;
padding-bottom: 10px;
}
#welctext {
padding: 0 0 16px 0;
}
Well, it took less then one minute after sending the question before my memory hooked up again and I rember how to do this. Margin is the margin to the parent conatiner while padding just to the preceeding element. So, in order to get the nice line I want I just increased the left margin to appropriate size. It works and I hope I explained it correctly...
Another method would be to use no margins / padding at all & float both of the elements left, so they always sit side by side, regardless of height.
Great resource on Floats: http://www.westvalley.edu/common/tutorial/instruct/cssTutorial/index__1094.htm
Actually if you float, you float only on the portion your section floats. If you want to "reserve" that area, you actually need to have display: inline-block
. That behaves as a block div and somewhat like a span at same time.
I might have changed a lot of stuff, but here i posted a jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/o9vLpbe4/
Make sure your #maincontent.width + #subsections.width < #container.width
, including padding and stuff. And zeroed it all for simplification. Since it behaves like a span, it will break to the other line if sizes don't fit in the line.
I also put #subsections
and #maincontent
inside a div.
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