Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Texts
A lot of people try to
customise my horizontally centred menus by adding drop-down sub-menus. This is a great idea but
unfortunately it can be a bit tricky because the overflow:hidden; rule chops off the
sub-menus and nothing is visible. For a CSS noob this can seem like an
impossible problem to fix. I get regular emails about this issue so I've put
together this detailed article to explain how it's done.
First,
here is an example of a my horizontally centred menus with drop-down sub-menus:
A lot of people try to customise my horizontally centred menus by adding drop-down sub-menus. This is a great idea but unfortunately it can be a bit tricky because the
First, here is an example of a my horizontally centred menus with drop-down sub-menus:
overflow:hidden; rule chops off the sub-menus and nothing is visible. For a CSS noob this can seem like an impossible problem to fix. I get regular emails about this issue so I've put together this detailed article to explain how it's done.
A lot of people try to customise my horizontally centred menus by adding drop-down sub-menus. This is a great idea but unfortunately it can be a bit tricky because the
First, here is an example of a my horizontally centred menus with drop-down sub-menus:
overflow:hidden; rule chops off the sub-menus and nothing is visible. For a CSS noob this can seem like an impossible problem to fix. I get regular emails about this issue so I've put together this detailed article to explain how it's done.
A lot of people try to customise my horizontally centred menus by adding drop-down sub-menus. This is a great idea but unfortunately it can be a bit tricky because the
First, here is an example of a my horizontally centred menus with drop-down sub-menus:
overflow:hidden; rule chops off the sub-menus and nothing is visible. For a CSS noob this can seem like an impossible problem to fix. I get regular emails about this issue so I've put together this detailed article to explain how it's done.
A lot of people try to customise my horizontally centred menus by adding drop-down sub-menus. This is a great idea but unfortunately it can be a bit tricky because the
First, here is an example of a my horizontally centred menus with drop-down sub-menus:
overflow:hidden; rule chops off the sub-menus and nothing is visible. For a CSS noob this can seem like an impossible problem to fix. I get regular emails about this issue so I've put together this detailed article to explain how it's done.
A lot of people try to customise my horizontally centred menus by adding drop-down sub-menus. This is a great idea but unfortunately it can be a bit tricky because the
First, here is an example of a my horizontally centred menus with drop-down sub-menus:
overflow:hidden; rule chops off the sub-menus and nothing is visible. For a CSS noob this can seem like an impossible problem to fix. I get regular emails about this issue so I've put together this detailed article to explain how it's done.