5

I've created a nice set of form elements in Photoshop and am looking to convert them into HTML and CSS. The simple input-text form will have a background image, as the field does not change in size. However, the text-area form will dynamically change size as the user types.

Normally, to build out this sort of style, I'd wrap the form field in divs, as such:

<div class = "textarea-top">
  <div class = "textarea-bottom">
    <textarea></textarea>
  </div>
</div>

Or by using multiple background-images in one wrapping div:

<div class = "textarea">
  <textarea></textarea>
</div>

Is there a better way to approach this? To restate, the field styles are advanced images that can be repeated (for the body of the field), and have styling for the top and bottom. The question is, what is the best practice in dealing with these advanced form styling?

1 Answer 1

4

I'm not entirely sure what you mean by "best practice", but one thing I'd improve are the semantics. You could (should?) use <fieldset>'s instead of a, rather meaningless, <div>.

And you don't need to use two <div>'s around the textarea, or even multiple background images on a single <div> (which is a CSS3 property, and not widely-supported).

Instead, you should wrap the <textarea> in a <label> element, and nest your background-images as I've described below:

Try this:

<fieldset class="expandableInput">
  <label>
    Semantic text:
    <textarea></textarea>
  </label>
</fieldset>

Bonus: wrapping form elements in <label>'s like this, affords a larger click area, for the user to gain focus on the form element at hand. Just be wary of <select>'s, which doesn't play nice (even though it's valid HTML)

The CSS would be something like:

.expandableInput {background: url(/path/to/first/img);}
  .expandableInput label {display: block; background: url(/path/to/second/img);}
    .expandableInput textarea {display: block; margin-top: 3px; background: url(/path/to/third/img);}

Also; For consistent looks on form elements, in every browser & platform, I can highly recommend Nathan Smith's Formalize CSS (it requires JS for HTML5 support in older browsers).

3
  • Thanks CabGFX, that really helped. Formalize looks really neat, and I'll give it a try later. As for what I was trying to do, I needed three background images (top, middle repeat, and bottom). I'll look into the Fieldset tag more, and see how I can keep the form more semantic. I don't think you'd want to wrap all of your text areas with fieldsets, though I could be wrong. In any case, this has helped. Thanks!
    – Akaishen
    Sep 6, 2011 at 22:08
  • Glad it helped - enough to accept the answer? You're right with regards to <fieldset>, it is meant to logically group one or more fields in your form, preferably with a <legend> to denote the context of the fields. I'll edit my answer with more details for achieving your three background images.
    – cabgfx
    Sep 6, 2011 at 22:15
  • Yes, it warrants an accepted answer. I apologize for my delay; I forgot as I'm still rather new here. ;) Using the label is an awesome idea! Thank you, again, for your help.
    – Akaishen
    Sep 7, 2011 at 4:18

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