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I've recently tried out to make a website with a bar on top and with an image that cover the rest of the screen, much like this X-theme demo. I've managed to get it right in proportion (with a lot of help from this thread).

<body>
<div id="block">
      <p>logo</p>
</div>
<header>
     <h1>jumbotron</h1>
</header>
<div id="page">
     <p>content</p>
</div>

*{
margin: 0;
}

#block {
  height: 10vh;
  width: 100%;
  background: red;
  background-size:cover;
  }

body{
  width: 100%;
  height: 100%;
}
header {
      height:90vh;
      width:100%;
      background: green;
      background-size:cover;
}

This solution is however not so practical. When you shrink down your browser window, the bar on top (naturally) shrinks as well. Adding a logo would then be impossible, so I wonder if there is any way to make the bars size constant, while the header still takes up the rest of the screen?

I would really appreciate some help! :)

1 Answer 1

1

Because vh and px are two different units, it is not possible to do some math with them like 100vh - 30px, but it's possible using some jQuery/JavaScript. I'll give you an example using jQuery (Be sure to add a fixed height to the header).

On the end of this answer there is a CSS-only solution for this problem. Found out about it later.

This is the html code:

<header class="header">YOUR LOGO HERE</header>
<section class="jumbotron">CONTENT HERE</section>
<section class="content">SOME OTHER CONTENT HERE</section>

And this should be the javascript one:

var resizePage = function() {
  var headerHeight = $('.header').outerHeight() // Getting the height of the header
    , pageHeight = $(window).height();          // Getting the height of the window

  $('.jumbotron').css('height', (pageHeight-headerHeight));
}

$(window).on('resize', resizePage());   // Fire every time the page resizes
resizePage();                           // Fire once the site is running

Here is a JSFiddle working with the snippets I told you: CLICK ME

UPDATE: Just found out that CSS is providing a calc() method. Here is another JSfiddle with this method: CLICK ME, TOO. So it is possible using pure CSS, but be aware of the browser support for this.

.jumbotron {
   /* Viewport height 100 minus 50px calculated using pure css */
  height: calc(100vh - 50px);
}

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