CSS Independent Content: Difference between revisions
m centers -> center |
A handy library. |
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var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; border:1px solid black; ' + | var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; border:1px solid black; ' + | ||
'top:50%; left:50%; width:30em; margin:-15em; 0 0 -10em; height:20em;'; | 'top:50%; left:50%; width:30em; margin:-15em; 0 0 -10em; height:20em;'; | ||
As Firefox's iframe handling is [https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=295813 rather] [https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=388714 buggy], you may want to spare yourself some pain by using [http://ecmanaut.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/lib/make-iframe.js a handy library] for the above, and use code like this instead: | |||
makeFrame(gotFrame); | |||
function gotGrame(iframe, win, doc) { | |||
iframe.height = "50"; | |||
iframe.style.position = "fixed"; | |||
frame.style.bottom = iframe.style.left = "0"; | |||
doc.body.innerHTML = "Hello world!"; | |||
} |
Revision as of 18:12, 28 February 2008
Any HTML you inject into a site is subject to the CSS rules of that site. This is often what you want: the elements you inject will fit in nicely. But if you inject something – perhaps a configuration panel – that should look the same to pages where styles can vary wildly (e.g. MySpace, eBay) or across multiple sites (e.g. @include *), you may find that you want it exempt from the site CSS.
The solution is to add your panel inside an iframe. Example code:
// position:fixed means stay fixed even the page scrolls. z-index keeps your iframe on top. // The remainder of the line smacks the panel into the bottom left corner, out of your way. // Overflow (in combination with the setTimeout) ensures the iframe fits your entire panel. var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; bottom:0; left:0; border:0; margin:0; padding:0; ' + 'overflow:hidden;' var iframe = document.createElement('iframe'); iframe.setAttribute('style', css); // The about:blank page becomes a blank(!) canvas to modify iframe.src = 'about:blank'; document.body.appendChild(iframe); // Make sure Firefox initializes the DOM before we try to use it. iframe.addEventListener("load", function() { var doc = iframe.contentDocument; doc.body.style.background = 'red'; doc.body.innerHTML = 'Test.'; iframe.style.width = doc.body.offsetWidth + "px"; iframe.style.height = doc.body.offsetHeight + "px"; }, false);
The above code will result in a minimal panel always-on-top in the bottom left corner, that grows to contain its contents. For a more intrusive lightbox-style panel mid-screen, just drop the two iframe.style
lines and change the CSS to e.g.:
// Margin, top, left, width and height center the iframe horizontally and vertically: var css = 'position:fixed; z-index:9999; border:1px solid black; ' + 'top:50%; left:50%; width:30em; margin:-15em; 0 0 -10em; height:20em;';
As Firefox's iframe handling is rather buggy, you may want to spare yourself some pain by using a handy library for the above, and use code like this instead:
makeFrame(gotFrame);
function gotGrame(iframe, win, doc) { iframe.height = "50"; iframe.style.position = "fixed"; frame.style.bottom = iframe.style.left = "0"; doc.body.innerHTML = "Hello world!"; }