I've been using the jQuery UI button all over my page, however I haven't found a way around what seems to be a simple problem. I want some of my buttons to be smaller than the other, this should be as simple as setting the CSS of the button text to something like, font: .8em;
However jQuery UI takes your DOM element and wraps it:
<button class="ui-button ui-button-text-only ui-widget ui-state-default ui-corner-all">
<span class="ui-button-text">Button Label</span>
</button>
So if I have a <button class="small-button">Small button!</button>
jQuery will place the text in a child span. Any font size given to the smal开发者_开发百科l-button
class will be ignored.
There's got to be a way around this without hacking at how jQuery makes its buttons. Any ideas?
If it's styling ui-button-text
with font-size
directly, you can override it at a higher level by applying !important. Such as:
.small-button {
font-size: .8em !important;
}
EDIT: try setting a CSS style directly on .ui-button-text
to inherit:
.ui-button-text {
font-size: inherit !important;
}
This should also make the !important on the .small-button
irrelevant.
This helped decrease the height of the button for me (Smoothness theme default is line-height of 1.4):
.ui-button .ui-button-text
{
line-height: 1.0;
}
Here is what I use in my websites to setup the font-sizes so that my button sizes are the same as on the jQuery UI website. This works because it's exactly how the jQuery UI website does it!
/* percentage to px scale (very simple)
80% = 8px
100% = 10px
120% = 12px
140% = 14px
180% = 18px
240% = 24px
260% = 26px
*/
body
{
font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
font-size:10px;
}
By setting the font-size properties like that for the body element, setting the font-size for everything else becomes trivial as 100% = 10px.
Just watch out for the cascading effect when using percentages - a child element's 100% will be equal to the parent element's font-size.
You can create different sized buttons by modifying the padding of the span element that is contained within the markup jQuery generates, as Tim suggests.
This markup/JavaScript...
$(document).ready(function(){
$("button").button();
});
<button id="some-id" class="some-class">Some Button</button>
Results in this transformed markup...
<button class="some-class ui-button ui-widget ui-state-default ui-corner-all
ui-button-text-only" id="some-id" role="button" aria-disabled="false">
<span class="ui-button-text">some button</span>
</button>
Which most certainly includes the id
and class
tags which were originally supplied. You can modify the size of your buttons by adding more padding to the span.ui-button-text
element.
Like So..
button#some-id .ui-button-text {
/* padding values here to your liking */
}
Just change the button font-size ;).
<asp:Button ID="btn2" runat="server" Text="Button" style="font-size:10px" />
Now add a jquery script to the button
<script type="text/javascript" language="javascript">
$(document).ready(function () {
$('input:submit, #btn2').button();
});
</script>
Good Luck. ;)
I used a combination of two suggestions above. It's pretty easy to tweak the UI just the way I like it.
To page's stylesheet add:
.ui-button .ui-button-text
{
padding: 0px 11px 0px 21px !important;
font-size: .72em !important;
}
I did this and it works fine.
$( "button" ).button("font-size", "0.8em");
My solution needed to work across the new menu items as well
The first to select the matching elements for both menu and button
.menu>.ui-button-icon-only,
.ui-button{
font-size:0.8em !important;
}
And the second as above to force inheiritance
.ui-button-text {
font-size: inherit !important;
}
Use jQuery at runtime, without modifying CSS. This gives you a lot more flexibility.
$(function() {
$("input[type=button]").css("font-size", "0.8em");
});
<input type="submit" value="Mostrar imágenes">
and my css:
input[type="submit"] {
color: #000;
border: 0 none;
cursor: pointer;
height: 30px;
width: 150px; }
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