Reputation: 751
I'm doing a site with side-menu. 30% of the screen is the menu and the rest is content.
The contents of the div, I put a background image using the COVER method. I used the first example: https://css-tricks.com/examples/FullPageBackgroundImage/css-1.php
However, this method works perfectly when the image occupies the entire background. As in my example, I want the same exact occupy 70% of the width, "eats" the image corners.
How can I fix this?
HTML:
<div id="esquerda" style="width: 30%; height: 500px">
....conteudo.....
</div>
<div id="direita" style="width: 70%; height: 500px">
<img src="fundo.jpg" class="bg">
</div>
CSS:
.bg {
min-height: 100%;
min-width: 1024px;
width: 100%;
height: auto;
position: fixed;
top: 0;
float: right;
}
@media screen and (max-width: 1024px){
.bg {
left: 50%;
margin-left: -512px;
}
}
Upvotes: 4
Views: 2787
Reputation: 696
Let's do it the easy way - use the CSS background-image: url("fundo.jpg");
on the div's style.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 206028
Basic approach using background-image
and 3 different elements (to prevent xBrowser issues related mostly to Safari)
setting the background to cover
on the #bg
layer element
*{ box-sizing: border-box;}
html, body{ height:100%; }
body{ position:static; margin:0; }
#bg{
background: url('http://www.gettyimages.ca/gi-resources/images/Homepage/Hero/UK/CMS_Creative_164657191_Kingfisher.jpg') 50%;
background-size: cover;
position: fixed;
top: 0; right: 0; bottom: 0;
width: 70%;
}
#menu{
position: fixed;
bottom: 0; top: 0; left: 0;
width: 30%;
background: rgba( 0, 0, 255, 0.4 );
}
#page{
position: relative;
border: 10px dashed #000;
margin-left: 30%;
width: 70%;
height: 2000px;
}
<div id="bg">BG</div>
<div id="menu">FIXED</div>
<div id="page">SCROLLABLE</div>
on top of that code you can apply CSS3 media queries as you please.
Note that the "easiest" would be not to use the separate #bg
element but instead to set the bg image directly to the #page
element using background-attachment: fixed;
but, as mentioned, the image might not appear on Safari in combination with it's size set to cover
.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 98
use the background-image
attribute in your CSS. You can create a separate class to use in the CSS that only has that attribute.
.bgImage {
background-image: url("fundo.jpg");
}
then apply the class to the <div>
tag.
<div id="direita" class="bgImage" style="width: 70%; height: 500px">
...
</div>
Upvotes: 1