Sha256: 02b3220a470bff52f5c4a163ee9f0d7792a6b156d823ba73377b42f0ab7756bc
Contents?: true
Size: 1.5 KB
Versions: 5
Compression:
Stored size: 1.5 KB
Contents
--- layout: docs title: Position description: Use these shorthand utilities for quickly configuring the position of an element. group: utilities toc: true --- ## Common values Quick positioning classes are available, though they are not responsive. {% highlight html %} <div class="position-static">...</div> <div class="position-relative">...</div> <div class="position-absolute">...</div> <div class="position-fixed">...</div> <div class="position-sticky">...</div> {% endhighlight %} ## Fixed top Position an element at the top of the viewport, from edge to edge. Be sure you understand the ramifications of fixed position in your project; you may need to add aditional CSS. {% highlight html %} <div class="fixed-top">...</div> {% endhighlight %} ## Fixed bottom Position an element at the bottom of the viewport, from edge to edge. Be sure you understand the ramifications of fixed position in your project; you may need to add aditional CSS. {% highlight html %} <div class="fixed-bottom">...</div> {% endhighlight %} ## Sticky top Position an element at the top of the viewport, from edge to edge, but only after you scroll past it. The `.sticky-top` utility uses CSS's `position: sticky`, which isn't fully supported in all browsers. **Microsoft Edge and IE11 will render `position: sticky` as `position: relative`.** As such, we wrap the styles in a `@supports` query, limiting the stickiness to only browsers that properly can render it. {% highlight html %} <div class="sticky-top">...</div> {% endhighlight %}
Version data entries
5 entries across 5 versions & 1 rubygems