4

Guys, I have some input checkbox tags: They look pretty light and hard to see or print. I tried restyle the checkbox, it seems that the disabled checkbox's style can't be changed? Do you guys have any idea? Thanks a lot! :)

2
  • Please provide some example code... Which colour is being used? ANd what do you mean by checkbox tag? Do you mean <input type="check"> HTML element? Or do you mean something else by tag Nov 29, 2010 at 23:38
  • Disabled inputs won't be submitted and can't be changed … so it probably isn't all that important the a user can see them clearly.
    – Quentin
    Nov 30, 2010 at 0:04

4 Answers 4

7

The trick is to not actually disable the checkbox but intercept the click action of the "disabled" textbox so it functions as if it was disabled from that point you can style it and it will look how you want.

What you will do is add this on your "disabled" checkboxes instead of disabled="disabled":

onclick="return false;"

EDIT: As someone noted below there is a drawback to using this method. The value of the checkbox will still be posted back to the server since it is technically enabled whereas if you used the supported method you would lose control over the look but wouldn't have to deal with this additional data. (Thanks Robert)

2
  • 1
    It's not exactly the same. Enabled controls are posted back to the server, disabled are not. Nov 29, 2010 at 23:42
  • Agreed the poster would need to account for that but it would allow him control over the styling of the element while not allowing the user to interact with the control. Also thanks for the heads up wasn't thinking about that when I wrote the answer
    – Adrian
    Nov 29, 2010 at 23:44
1

If you're using default checkboxes with default styling, you shouldn't worry too much. They've designed them just fine to be seen as they should be.
Could as well be your monitor contrast/brightness setting.

but if you're using some custom checkbox design, you will most probably have to change images.

1
  • Thanks Robert. I like the default settings too, but the customer keeps asking me make them darker and unclickable at same time. So...Still, Thank you. :)
    – Lei
    Nov 29, 2010 at 23:52
1

With a bit of CSS3 you can actually do some pretty cool stuff about it.

I came up to this possible solution http://jsfiddle.net/HCbRF/1/

HTML

<div>
    <input type="checkbox" id="c1" disabled />
    <label for="c1"><span></span>Check Box 1</label>
    <br>
    <input type="checkbox" id="c2"/>
    <label for="c2"><span></span>Check Box 2</label>
</div>

CSS

div {
    width:110px;
    height:50px;
    padding:20px;
    background:#40464b;
    border-radius:6px;
}
input[type="checkbox"] {
    display:none;
}
input[type="checkbox"] + label {
    color:#f2f2f2;
    font-family:Arial, sans-serif;
    font-size:14px;
    line-height: 25px;
}
input[type="checkbox"] + label span {
    display:inline-block;
    width:19px;
    height:19px;
    margin:-1px 4px 0 0;
    vertical-align:middle;
   background:url(http://webdesigntutsplus.s3.amazonaws.com/tuts/391_checkboxes/check_radio_sheet.png) left top no-repeat;
    cursor:pointer;
}
input[disabled] + label span {
    display:inline-block;
    width:16px;
    height:16px;
    margin:-1px 6px 0 0;
    vertical-align:middle;
    background:#ccc left top no-repeat;
    border-radius: 3px;
    -moz-box-shadow: inset 0 0 2px #000;
    -webkit-box-shadow: inset 0 0 2px#000;
    box-shadow: inner 0 0 5px #888;
    cursor:pointer;
}
input[type="checkbox"]:checked + label span {
       background:url(http://webdesigntutsplus.s3.amazonaws.com/tuts/391_checkboxes/check_radio_sheet.png) -19px top no-repeat;
}

I started from this tutorial http://webdesign.tutsplus.com/tutorials/htmlcss-tutorials/quick-tip-easy-css3-checkboxes-and-radio-buttons/

0

You could exclude the disabled property, set pointer-events to none and add a bit of opacity.

<input
    checked="true"
    style="pointer-events: none; opacity: 0.7"
    type="checkbox"
 />

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