Computer Science, asked by jayatpalaspagar5, 2 months ago

position types in css are​

Answers

Answered by malleshgl1980
0

Answer:

ok

Explanation:

Property Values

Value Description

absolute The element is positioned relative to its first positioned (not static) ancestor element

fixed The element is positioned relative to the browser window

relative The element is positioned relative to its normal position, so "left:20px" adds 20 pixels to the element's LEFT position

Answered by chloe128349
0

Answer:

Value Description Play it

static = Default value. Elements render in order, as they appear in the document flow  

absolute = The element is positioned relative to its first positioned (not static) ancestor element  

fixed = The element is positioned relative to the browser window  

relative = The element is positioned relative to its normal position, so "left:20px" adds 20 pixels to the element's LEFT position  

sticky = The element is positioned based on the user's scroll position . A sticky element toggles between relative and fixed, depending on the scroll position. It is positioned relative until a given offset position is met in the viewport - then it "sticks" in place (like position: fixed).

Note: Not supported in IE/Edge 15 or earlier. Supported in Safari from version 6.1 with a -webkit- prefix.  

inherit =  Inherits this property from its parent element. Read about inherit

Examples

Example

How to position an element relative to its normal position:

h2.pos_left {

 position: relative;

 left: -20px;

}

h2.pos_right {

 position: relative;

 left: 20px;

}

Try

Similar questions