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26 lines
1.0 KiB
26 lines
1.0 KiB
2 years ago
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Layers with different opacity are a staple of digital compositing systems but weirdly CSS is terrible at it. The stack/layer CSS in `static/global.csS` implements a simple method using `display: grid` to place elements into a single cell. The CSS grid system will then correctly layer each element in a stack. The elements also are set to `position:relative` so you can change their `z-index` to shuffle them around. Alternatively, you can simply set one of the children to `class="top"` and that one element will be on top.
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If you don't set a `background-color` color then the layers will be transparent. You can also use `opacity` to hide or fade the layers in the stack.
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The CSS that is making this work is below (but look in `static/global.css` to confirm it's still done this way.
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```
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.stacked {
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display: grid;
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grid-template-rows: 1fr;
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grid-template-columns: 1fr;
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grid-template-areas: "cover";
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}
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.stacked .layer {
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width: 100%;
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position: relative;
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grid-area: cover;
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}
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.stacked .top {
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z-index: 10;
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}
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```
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