I have the following simple markup and style (see JSFiddle):
Html:
<div id="wrapper"><div id="content"></div></div>
CSS:
#content {
background-color:lightyellow;
height:200px;
color:green;
}
#wrapper{
border:1px solid black;
color:red;
}
I'm setting the spinner target to the #content
div
using both Vanilla JS and jQuery options and I encounter a couple of problems. First, in both cases, the spinner does not appear to be constructed in the middle of the targeted element's parent, contrary to what the documentation says:
Positioning
Since version 2.0.0 the spinner is absolutely positioned at 50% of its offset parent. You may specify a top and left option to position the spinner manually.
Second, when using Vanilla JS, the spinner does not use the color set on the target. When starting it using jQuery, it does (i.e. for #content
it uses green).
Am I understanding the documentation wrong? If so, how can I center the spinner inside a specific element? If not, why isn't the snippet above centering the spinner inside the target?
I have the following simple markup and style (see JSFiddle):
Html:
<div id="wrapper"><div id="content"></div></div>
CSS:
#content {
background-color:lightyellow;
height:200px;
color:green;
}
#wrapper{
border:1px solid black;
color:red;
}
I'm setting the spinner target to the #content
div
using both Vanilla JS and jQuery options and I encounter a couple of problems. First, in both cases, the spinner does not appear to be constructed in the middle of the targeted element's parent, contrary to what the documentation says:
Positioning
Since version 2.0.0 the spinner is absolutely positioned at 50% of its offset parent. You may specify a top and left option to position the spinner manually.
Second, when using Vanilla JS, the spinner does not use the color set on the target. When starting it using jQuery, it does (i.e. for #content
it uses green).
Am I understanding the documentation wrong? If so, how can I center the spinner inside a specific element? If not, why isn't the snippet above centering the spinner inside the target?
Share Improve this question asked Mar 24, 2014 at 8:06 Andrei VAndrei V 7,5066 gold badges47 silver badges71 bronze badges3 Answers
Reset to default 13Simply add
position: relative;
to the #content
CSS rule.
CSS:
#content {
background-color: lightyellow;
text-align: middle;
height: 200px;
color: green;
position: relative;
}
#wrapper {
border: 1px solid black;
}
See the updated JSFiddle here.
Edit:
The jQuery plugin for spin.js will take on the color of the parent if you have not already set a color yourself on initialisation. This is because it has this additional functionality built in. In jQuery.spin.js (on line 65):
opts = $.extend(
{ color: color || $this.css('color') },
$.fn.spin.presets[opts] || opts
)
This will pick the color of the parent container and replace the color in the opts
object so that the spinner has the correct color.
If you want to replicate this functionality in standard JavaScript, you could do something like this:
$(document).ready(function () {
var opts = {
lines: 17, // The number of lines to draw
length: 26, // The length of each line
width: 12, // The line thickness
radius: 3, // The radius of the inner circle
corners: 1, // Corner roundness (0..1)
rotate: 0, // The rotation offset
direction: 1, // 1: clockwise, -1: counterclockwise
color: '#000', // #rgb or #rrggbb or array of colors
speed: 1.1, // Rounds per second
trail: 74, // Afterglow percentage
shadow: true, // Whether to render a shadow
hwaccel: false, // Whether to use hardware acceleration
className: 'spinner', // The CSS class to assign to the spinner
zIndex: 2e9, // The z-index (defaults to 2000000000)
top: '50%', // Top position relative to parent in px
left: '50%' // Left position relative to parent in px
};
//$('#content').spin(opts);
var target = document.getElementById('content');
opts.color = getComputedStyle(target).getPropertyValue('color');
var spinner = new Spinner(opts).spin(target);
});
See this updated JSFiddle.
I'm not entirely sure, but if I'm correct, a percentage set in CSS is calculated from the window, not from an element within that window. Therefore, although I think the top/left is not being calculated from within the parent, but from the window.
Furthermore, the documentation in-line says:
Left position relative to parent in px
Read the last 2 characters: pixels, not percentage.
How to fix it? Hardcoding is one possible way, but pretty static (set left to half of the content's width - the spinner's width, the top half of the.. you get the picture).
The solution above didn't work for me. I had to add a new css class name inside the "className" option of the spinner options set up. eg:
var opts = {...,
className: 'spinner myCustomClass',
....
}
Where i put the necessary styles for centering my spinner.