-1

I have tried following tutorials on W3schools, and I've also dug into Developer Tools on the website I'm tasked with cloning, and have gone back to my previous project when I had to do a background image.

I know this is a user error, but I am stuck.

My HTML looks like this:

<section class="introduction">  <img src="background-image">

and my CSS looks like this:

.introduction {
  background-image: url('../images/karma-background.jpg'); 
}  
1
  • 2
    It seems you forgot to include a question in your question.
    – Biffen
    May 28, 2016 at 19:36

3 Answers 3

2

you need to set height and width for background-image to work

.introduction {
  background-image: url('//dummyimage.com/200x200'); 
  height:200px;
  width:200px;
}
<section class="introduction">This text has a background image</section>

Or you can simply use img src as you had in your code, but won't be a background

img {
  height: 200px;
  width: 200px;
}
<section class="introduction">
  <img src="//dummyimage.com/200x200" />
</section>

1

There's a couple of learning opportunities here for a new coder.

First, let's look at your <img> tag. The src attribute of the image tag is used to refer to an actual image file. To use it, you might say:

<img src="../images/karma.jpg" />

an equivalent, but less common expression would be:

<img src="../images/karma.jpg"></image>

In your sample, you have the attribute src="background-image", which suggests that you are trying to use as though it were the class or style attribute. In some situations, this might be a step on the right track, but not here.

The <img> tag is really intended for content images in the foreground. Because you are specifically trying to use an image for the background, your CSS is the best place for the reference to the background image. Therefore, the <img> tag you have is unnecessary, and perhaps contributing to your confusion.

Here's one variation that would make your code work:

<section class="introduction">
     Lorum ipsum dolor sit amet
</section>

.introduction {
    background-image: url('../images/karma-background.jpg');
}

By including any kind of content at all between your opening and closing <section> tags, the browser knows how much space needs to be filled with a background, and will use some or all of the file karma-background.jpg to fill it. Alternately, you can hard-code the size you want filled with a background image:

.introduction {
    background-image: url('../images/karma-background.jpg');
    height: 100px;
    width: 100px;
}
1
  • I really appreciate you taking the time to respond....I was really intimidated to post, and it looks as though I didn't post properly...so, again, thank you for looking past that and giving me this feedback. May 28, 2016 at 20:20
0

You don't require an image object

<img src="...">

css and background images work like so.

<section class="introduction"></section>

.introduction {
background-image:url('../images/karma-background.jpg'); 
}

so actually the problem is you haven't ended your section tag like I have in my example. You may have to add additional css for sizing

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.