I am using isotope to filter blog posts category wise. My layout is as below:
I am using bootstrap column classes for grid items. As per layout, I have to leave first column for category listing and start isotope filtering from second column.
I have tried offsetting the column but absolute posit...
I would recommend using MDN over W3Schools, for what it's worth.
much better/more accurate documentation
@bigchungus "taking into account mobile and tablet devices" is called responsive design, and it's a bit of a meaty topic. In other words, there's no quick fix or single property you can apply to magically fix things
also <strong> is not recommended as it is styling, which should be done via CSS instead. On top of that, it's unneeded inside <h> tags, which already bold text by default
Another small FYI - if you ever have & in HTML, it's recommended you write & instead. That way you can avoid some encoding issues that might happen
Is it possible to use just HTML/CSS to have a square with a certain gradient, and when hovered over the gradient flips upside down? Is this possible without an event listener
One more thing, so the buttons look fine, I was gonna keep them bigger like before, but the supervisor told me they were too big. The ones you sent are quite the right size, but are centered funky in the sharepoint page and very close together on top with two lists underneath and they dont line up
See jsfiddle.net/TylerH/vf61as5p/4 for an example of what float is for. The top is an image mid-flow. The bottom is how articles were laid out in newspapers and magazines, and so CSS added the float property for websites so that they could achieve the same "floating image" design for articles/webpages
If you find yourself using float for something other than that, there's a good chance that there's a better way (other than using float) to do what you want
the only difference between the two articles is that the second one has float: left on the image
@bigchungus As I recall, SharePoint injects a ton of additional divs into the page markup (if you ever inspect it in the browser, it's like literally div div div div div div div div div div div div div > your content)