Words not staying in css toggle - php

I have a toggle that I am using for twitter bootstrap, and one of the words is poping out and not staying inside the toggle, I highlighted the messed up word in a red box below:
My code is:
<div class=\"span9 space\">
<h3 class=\"title pull-left\">$name</h3>
<link rel=\"stylesheet\" href=\"lib/prism/prism-light.css\">
<script src=\"lib/prism/prism.js\"></script>
<link rel=\"stylesheet\" href=\"toggle-switch.css\">
<form class=\"form-horizontal pull-right\">
<div class=\"control-group\">
<label class=\"control-label\"></label>
<div class=\"controls btn disabled switch switch-two\">
<input id=\"week9\" name=\"view\" type=\"radio\" checked>
<label for=\"week9\" onclick=\"\">Not Visited</label>
<input id=\"month10\" name=\"view\" type=\"radio\">
<label for=\"month10\" onclick=\"\">Visited</label>
<span class=\"slide-button btn btn-warning\"></span>
</div>
</div>
</form>
</div>
The toggle I am using is from here:
http://ghinda.net/css-toggle-switch/bootstrap.html
Here is also my live code:
http://www.beerportfolio.com/breweryPage2.php?id=BSsTGw

The issue is that the Switch class does not stretch for your words,
you can solve it by hardcoding the width in the switch class in your style sheet or by adding it in the div you want stretch and this should solve your issue
<div class=\"controls btn disabled switch switch-two\" style=\"width: xxxpx !important;\">
while xxx represent the value you need

I did a live edit on the demo you supplied and used your values for the items and added a smaller width than what is needed and the visited part of 'Not Visited' went to a new line. You might want to have a larger width for your toggle item(s).
EDIT:
It looks like you did modify some of the css or it inherited some, you can modify it any way you want but try:
toggle-switch line 210
.toggle label,
.toggle p,
.switch label {
line-height: 13px;/*30px*/
}
and remove:
bootstrap.min.css line 333
.form-horizontal .controls {
margin-left: 0;/*180px*/
}

Related

Hide menu-text (div) on website (php, html)

I have a simple website, using php, html, css,
and would like to hide two menu buttons:
menu box & text
<div class="filter margin"></div>
<div class="filter_options">
<div class="filter_op filter_op_selected" data-type="type" data-id="bla 1">
<div class="filter_check"></div>
<div class="filter_value">bla</div>
</div>
<div class="filter_op " data-type="type" data-id="bla 2">
<div class="filter_check"></div>
<div class="filter_value">bla</div>
</div>
Still it is necessary, that the upper box is ticked & as such recognized by the code;
for the correct work-logic of the menu.
Thanks for any tip or suggestion.
[I know that in the code language mql4/5, which is based on php, you can simply hide a line of code when typing # in front of it.
It won't be shown, but it will be used (if such a box is hidden but ticked, it will behave like that).
I was asking myself how to do that in php]
After researching a lot, I've come to the following answer:
<div class="filter margin"></div>
<div class="filter_options">
<div
class="filter_op filter_op_selected"
data-type="type"
data-id="bla 1"
style="height: 0; visibility: hidden; font-size: 0; padding: 0; margin: 0"
>
<div class="ranking_filter_check"></div>
<div class="ranking_filter_value">bla</div>
</div>
</div>

Add text under "Place Order" button at WooCommerce checkout

I would like to add some text under the "Place Order" button at WooCommerce checkout.
I'm using the woocommerce_review_order_after_submit hook:
add_action( 'woocommerce_review_order_after_submit', 'add_after_checkout_button' );
function add_after_checkout_button() {
echo '<p>By clicking on the purchase button, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy</p>';
}
Result (screenshot): https://ibb.co/F38bxDf
Could someone please help me edit this code to:
Add some space at the top (between the text and the "Place Order"
button)
Center align the text
Turn "Terms of Service" and "Privacy Policy" into clickable links
Decrease the line-height of the text
Decrease the font size
Is there a way to give this text a CSS class so I can control the styling of it with custom CSS? Or is possible to somehow type the custom CSS in the code snippet itself?
EDIT:
I've got 2 pieces of code.
Nr 1:
add_action( 'woocommerce_review_order_after_submit', 'add_after_checkout_button' );
function add_after_checkout_button() {
echo '<p class="text-under-place-order">By clicking on the purchase button, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy</p>';
}
and
Nr 2:
<script src="https://kit.fontawesome.com/5e15d2f246.js" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<div class="row">
<div class="column">
<i class="fas fa-lock"></i>
SSL encrypted payment
</div>
<div class="column">
<i class="fas fa-undo"></i>
100% money-back guarantee
</div>
</div>
Code snippet Nr 1 solves my initial question.
Code snippet Nr 2 is an addition to display "encrypted payment" and "money-back guarantee" above the text as per my request in the comments.
I don't know how to merge these 2 pieces of code into 1.
You could add a class like this:
function add_after_checkout_button() {
echo '<p class="yourClassName">By clicking on the purchase button, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy</p>';
}
Or use css inline like this:
function add_after_checkout_button() {
echo '<p style="padding-top: 10px;">By clicking on the purchase button, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy</p>';
}
To turn the text into links just use a Terms and Service tag inside, just like you already did with the <p>.
EDIT:
HTML and CSS code to add an "encrypted payment" and "money-back guarantee" as requested in the comments:
<script src="https://kit.fontawesome.com/5e15d2f246.js" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<div class="row">
<div class="column">
<i class="fas fa-lock"></i>
SSL encrypted payment
</div>
<div class="column">
<i class="fas fa-undo"></i>
100% money-back guarantee
</div>
</div>
.row {
display: flex;
text-align: center;
}
.column {
flex: 50%;
}
You should just add a class to your tag <p></p> and style it in your style.css file in your child theme.
For the links, just add tags around the words "Terms of Service" and "Privacy Policy"

Display SVG in dropdown <select> [duplicate]

I have a select list of genders.
Code:
<select>
<option>male</option>
<option>female</option>
<option>others</option>
</select>
I want to use an image in drop down list as drop-down-icon.jpeg.
I want to add a button in place of drop down icon.
How to do that?
In Firefox you can just add background image to option:
<select>
<option style="background-image:url(male.png);">male</option>
<option style="background-image:url(female.png);">female</option>
<option style="background-image:url(others.png);">others</option>
</select>
Better yet, you can separate HTML and CSS like that
HTML
<select id="gender">
<option>male</option>
<option>female</option>
<option>others</option>
</select>
CSS
select#gender option[value="male"] { background-image:url(male.png); }
select#gender option[value="female"] { background-image:url(female.png); }
select#gender option[value="others"] { background-image:url(others.png); }
In other browsers the only way of doing that would be using some JS widget library, like for example jQuery UI, e.g. using Selectable.
From jQuery UI 1.11, Selectmenu widget is available, which is very close to what you want.
With countries, languages or currency you may use emojis.
Works with pretty much every browser/OS that supports the use of emojis.
select {
height: 50px;
line-height: 50px;
font-size: 12pt;
}
<select name="countries">
<option value="NL">🇳🇱 Netherlands</option>
<option value="DE">🇩🇪 Germany</option>
<option value="FR">🇫🇷 France</option>
<option value="ES">🇪🇸 Spain</option>
</select>
<br /><br />
<select name="currency">
<option value="EUR">🇪🇺 € EUR 💶</option>
<option value="GBP">🇬🇧 £ GBP 💷</option>
<option value="USD">🇺🇸 $ USD 💵</option>
<option value="YEN">🇯🇵 ¥ YEN 💴</option>
</select>
You can use iconselect.js; Icon/image select (combobox, dropdown)
Demo and download; http://bug7a.github.io/iconselect.js/
HTML usage;
<div id="my-icon-select"></div>
Javascript usage;
var iconSelect;
window.onload = function(){
iconSelect = new IconSelect("my-icon-select");
var icons = [];
icons.push({'iconFilePath':'images/icons/1.png', 'iconValue':'1'});
icons.push({'iconFilePath':'images/icons/2.png', 'iconValue':'2'});
icons.push({'iconFilePath':'images/icons/3.png', 'iconValue':'3'});
iconSelect.refresh(icons);
};
My solution is to use Font Awesome and then add library icons as text, using the unicode in HTML directly.
You just need the Unicode value for whatever icon you want, and they are all found here: Font Awesome full list of icons, including unicode
Here is an example state filter:
<select name='state' style='height: 45px; font-family:Arial, Font Awesome;'>
<option value=''> All States</option>
<option value='enabled' style='color:green;'> Enabled</option>
<option value='paused' style='color:orange;'> Paused</option>
<option value='archived' style='color:red;'> Archived</option>
</select>
Note the font-family:Arial, FontAwesome; is required to be assigned in style for select like given in the example.
You already have several answers that suggest using JavaScript/jQuery. I am going to add an alternative that only uses HTML and CSS without any JS.
The basic idea is to use a set of radio buttons and labels (that will activate/deactivate the radio buttons), and with CSS control that only the label associated to the selected radio button will be displayed. If you want to allow selecting multiple values, you could achieve it by using checkboxes instead of radio buttons.
Here is an example. The code may be a bit messier (specially compared to the other solutions):
.select-sim {
width:200px;
height:22px;
line-height:22px;
vertical-align:middle;
position:relative;
background:white;
border:1px solid #ccc;
overflow:hidden;
}
.select-sim::after {
content:"▼";
font-size:0.5em;
font-family:arial;
position:absolute;
top:50%;
right:5px;
transform:translate(0, -50%);
}
.select-sim:hover::after {
content:"";
}
.select-sim:hover {
overflow:visible;
}
.select-sim:hover .options .option label {
display:inline-block;
}
.select-sim:hover .options {
background:white;
border:1px solid #ccc;
position:absolute;
top:-1px;
left:-1px;
width:100%;
height:88px;
overflow-y:scroll;
}
.select-sim .options .option {
overflow:hidden;
}
.select-sim:hover .options .option {
height:22px;
overflow:hidden;
}
.select-sim .options .option img {
vertical-align:middle;
}
.select-sim .options .option label {
display:none;
}
.select-sim .options .option input {
width:0;
height:0;
overflow:hidden;
margin:0;
padding:0;
float:left;
display:inline-block;
/* fix specific for Firefox */
position: absolute;
left: -10000px;
}
.select-sim .options .option input:checked + label {
display:block;
width:100%;
}
.select-sim:hover .options .option input + label {
display:block;
}
.select-sim:hover .options .option input:checked + label {
background:#fffff0;
}
<div class="select-sim" id="select-color">
<div class="options">
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="" id="color-" checked />
<label for="color-">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/ffffff/ffffff" alt="" /> Select an option
</label>
</div>
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="red" id="color-red" />
<label for="color-red">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/ff0000/ffffff" alt="" /> Red
</label>
</div>
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="green" id="color-green" />
<label for="color-green">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/00ff00/ffffff" alt="" /> Green
</label>
</div>
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="blue" id="color-blue" />
<label for="color-blue">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/0000ff/ffffff" alt="" /> Blue
</label>
</div>
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="yellow" id="color-yellow" />
<label for="color-yellow">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/ffff00/ffffff" alt="" /> Yellow
</label>
</div>
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="pink" id="color-pink" />
<label for="color-pink">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/ff00ff/ffffff" alt="" /> Pink
</label>
</div>
<div class="option">
<input type="radio" name="color" value="turquoise" id="color-turquoise" />
<label for="color-turquoise">
<img src="http://placehold.it/22/00ffff/ffffff" alt="" /> Turquoise
</label>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Another jQuery cross-browser solution for this problem is http://designwithpc.com/Plugins/ddSlick which is made for exactly this use.
This is using ms-Dropdown : https://github.com/marghoobsuleman/ms-Dropdown
Data resource is json. But you dont need to use json. If you want you can use with css.
Css example : https://github.com/marghoobsuleman/ms-Dropdown/tree/master/examples
Json Example : http://jsfiddle.net/tcibikci/w3rdhj4s/6
HTML
<div id="byjson"></div>
Script
<script>
var jsonData = [
{description:'Choos your payment gateway', value:'', text:'Payment Gateway'},
{image:'https://via.placeholder.com/50', description:'My life. My card...', value:'amex', text:'Amex'},
{image:'https://via.placeholder.com/50', description:'It pays to Discover...', value:'Discover', text:'Discover'},
{image:'https://via.placeholder.com/50', title:'For everything else...', description:'For everything else...', value:'Mastercard', text:'Mastercard'},
{image:'https://via.placeholder.com/50', description:'Sorry not available...', value:'cash', text:'Cash on devlivery', disabled:true},
{image:'https://via.placeholder.com/50', description:'All you need...', value:'Visa', text:'Visa'},
{image:'https://via.placeholder.com/50', description:'Pay and get paid...', value:'Paypal', text:'Paypal'}
];
$("#byjson").msDropDown({byJson:{data:jsonData, name:'payments2'}}).data("dd");
}
</script>
For those wanting to display an icon, and accepting a "black and white" solution, one possibility is using character entities:
<select>
<option>100 €</option>
<option>89 £</option>
</select>
By extension, your icons can be stored in a custom font.
Here's an example using the font FontAwesome: https://jsfiddle.net/14606fv9/2/
https://jsfiddle.net/14606fv9/2/
One benefit is that it doesn't require any Javascript.
However, pay attention that loading the full font doesn't slow down the loading of your page.
Nota bene:
The solution of using a background image doesn't seem working anymore in Firefox (at least in version 57 "Quantum"):
<select>
<option style="background-image:url(euro.png);">100</option>
<option style="background-image:url(pound.png);">89</option>
</select>
For a two color image, you can use Fontello, and import any custom glyph you want to use. Just make your image in Illustrator, save to SVG, and drop it onto the Fontello site, then download your custom font ready to import. No JavaScript!
Alvaros JS free answer was a great start for me, and I really tried to get a truly JS-free answer that still delivered all the functionality expected of a Select with images, but sadly nesting forms was the down-fall. I'm posting two solutions here; my main solution that uses 1 line of JavaScript, and a totally JavaScript-free solution that won't work inside another form, but might be useful for nav menus.
Unfortunately there is a bit of repetition in the code, but when you think about what a Select does it makes sense. When you click on an option it copies that text to the selected area, i.e., clicking 1 of 4 options will not change the 4 options, but the top will now repeat the one you clicked. To do this with images would require JavaScript, orrrr... you duplicate the entries.
In my example we have a list of games (Products), which have versions. Each product may also have Expansions, which can also have versions. For each Product we give the user a list of each version if there's more than one, along with an image and version specific text.
<h4>#Model.Name</h4>
#if (Model.Versions.Count == 1)
{
<div class="rich-select-option-body pl-2">
<img src="#Model.Versions[0].ImageUrl" alt="">#Model.Versions[0].VersionName (#Model.Versions[0].Year)
</div>
}
else
{
<h5>Select the version</h5>
<div class="rich-select custom-select">
<div class="rich-select-dropdown">
#foreach (var version in Model.Versions)
{
<div class="rich-select-option">
<input type="radio" name="game" id="game-#version.ProductId-#version.VersionId" #if (version == Model.Versions.First()) { #Html.Raw(" checked") ; } />
<div class="rich-select-option-body">
<label tabindex="-1">
<img src="#version.ImageUrl" alt="">#version.VersionName (#version.Year)
</label>
</div>
</div>
}
</div>
<input type="checkbox" id="rich-select-dropdown-button" class="rich-select-dropdown-button" />
<label for="rich-select-dropdown-button"></label>
<div class="rich-select-options">
#foreach (var version in Model.Versions)
{
<div class="rich-select-option">
<div class="rich-select-option-body">
<label for="game-#version.ProductId-#version.VersionId" tabindex="-1" onclick="document.getElementById('rich-select-dropdown-button').click();">
<img src="#version.ImageUrl" alt=""> #version.VersionName (#version.Year)
</label>
</div>
</div>
}
</div>
</div>
}
Using JS for the checkbox deselection we can have multiple instances on a form. Here I've extended to show a list of Expansions, which also have the same logic around versions.
<h5 class="mt-3">Include Expansions?</h5>
#foreach (var expansion in Model.Expansions)
{
<div class="form-row">
<div class="custom-control custom-checkbox w-100">
<input type="checkbox" class="expansion-checkbox custom-control-input" id="exp-#expansion.ProductId">
<label class="custom-control-label w-100" for="exp-#expansion.ProductId">
#if (expansion.Versions.Count == 1)
{
<div class="rich-select-option-body pl-2">
<img src="#expansion.ImageUrl" />#expansion.Name: #expansion.Versions[0].VersionName (#expansion.Versions[0].Year)
</div>
}
else
{
<div class="rich-select custom-select">
<div class="rich-select-dropdown">
#foreach (var version in expansion.Versions)
{
<div class="rich-select-option">
<input type="radio" name="exp-#version.ProductId" id="exp-#version.ProductId-#version.VersionId" #if (version == expansion.Versions.First()) { #Html.Raw(" checked") ; } />
<div class="rich-select-option-body">
<label tabindex="-1">
<img src="#version.ImageUrl" alt="">#expansion.Name: #version.VersionName (#version.Year)
</label>
</div>
</div>
}
</div>
<input type="checkbox" id="rich-select-dropdown-button-#expansion.ProductId" class="rich-select-dropdown-button" />
<label for="rich-select-dropdown-button-#expansion.ProductId"></label>
<div class="rich-select-options">
#foreach (var version in expansion.Versions)
{
<div class="rich-select-option">
<div class="rich-select-option-body">
<label for="exp-#version.ProductId-#version.VersionId" tabindex="-1" onclick="document.getElementById('rich-select-dropdown-button-#expansion.ProductId').click();">
<img src="#version.ImageUrl" alt="">#expansion.Name: #version.VersionName (#version.Year)
</label>
</div>
</div>
}
</div>
</div>
}
</label>
</div>
</div>
Of course this requires a fair bit of CSS, which I've only included in this JSFiddle to reduce the size of this already massive answer. I've used Bootstrap 4 to reduce the amount needed, and also to allow it to fit in with other Bootstrap controls and any site customisations that have been made.
The images are set to 75px, but this can easily be changed in 5 lines in .rich-select and .rich-select-option-body img
I propose an alternative
when I'm in a difficult situation like this using dxlookup from devexpress
Examples:https://js.devexpress.com/Demos/WidgetsGallery/Demo/Lookup/Templates/jQuery/Light/
I tried several jquery based custom select with images, but none worked in responsive layouts. Finally i came accross Bootstrap-Select. After some modifications i was able to produce this code.
Code and github repo here
I got the same issue. My solution was a foreach of radio buttons, with the image at the right of it. Since you can only choose a single option at radio, it works (like) a select.
Worked well for me.
I was struggling with the same problem: how to create a language selector with flags. I came up with a :ḧover solution without javascript. It does involve some server-side processing to set a class in the HTML.
The code can be easily generated from PHP or nodejs or Angular/Typescript. In this example there are 3 images contained in an A-element (< a href='./?lang=..."> ).
The trick is that you should fetch the URL GET parameter lang and set the class selected so it will be the only one visible.
The CSS hinges on the fact that there is only one flag visible based on the class selected being present. When the mouse hovers over the container (<div class="languageselect">.....</div>) the CSS will show all flags by overriding the classes div.flag:not(.selected) and div.flag.selected and setting display:block . Then the <a href="..."> will be available to the users.
Of course there is lots of other styling possible to increase useability. This is just a starting point.
Please note the first part of the CSS-line will put the language selector on top on a fixed position. This also helps prevent the flag-container to span a whole line, messing up the :hover detection.
Happy coding!
WOrking example here: codepen
HTML:
<div class="languageselect">
<div class="select">
<div class="flag ">
<a href="./?lang=en">
<img src="https://www.sciencekids.co.nz/images/pictures/flags120/United_Kingdom.jpg">
</a>
</div>
<div class="flag selected">
<a href="./?lang=en_us">
<img src="https://www.sciencekids.co.nz/images/pictures/flags120/United_States.jpg">
</a>
</div>
<div class="flag ">
<a href="./?lang=nl">
<img src="https://www.sciencekids.co.nz/images/pictures/flags96/Netherlands.jpg">
</a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
CSS:
.languageselect {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left:0;
z-index: 1000;
}
.languageselect img {
max-height: 20px;
}
.languageselect div.flag:not(.selected) {
display: none;
}
.languageselect div.flag.selected {
display: block;
}
.languageselect:hover div.flag {
display:block;
}
UPDATE: As of 2018, this seems to work now. Tested in Chrome, Firefox, IE and Edge
UPDATE: Yes I changed the background-color, not the image, stop voting me down, showing that you can change style here is still a useful contribution.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<style>
select#newlocale option[value="volvo"] { background-color: powderblue; }
select#newlocale option[value="opel"] { background-color: red; }
select#newlocale option[value="audi"] { background-color: green; }
</style>
<select id="newlocale">
<option value="volvo"><div >Volvo</div></option>
<option value="saab">Saab</option>
<option value="opel">Opel</option>
<option value="audi">Audi</option>
</select>
</body>
</html>

How to draw text on top of image HTML?

I need to draw text in top of the image this the look like
when the page load i need to display price in side the photo.I try it like this
<button class="btn btn-danger" id="buy-btn" data-toggle="modal" data-target=".package-buy-modal">BOOK NOW</button>
<img id="price-tag" style="position: relative;width: 100%; /* for IE 6 */" src="<?php echo base_url()?>assets_profile/img/price.png">
<h2 style="-o-transform: rotate(32deg);-moz-transform: rotate(32deg);-webkit-transform: rotate(32deg);">$<?php echo $car_data['Charges']; ?></h2>
But it didn't work as i expected.how can i do this.if there is another easy way to this ?
Here is an example of using background-image within a div so that you can put more inside the div, ie)text
HTML:
<div id='image' src='http://i.stack.imgur.com/1DZ6X.jpg'>
<h2 id='price'>Price: $10</h2>
</div>
CSS:
#image {
width:243px;
height:163px;
background-image:url('http://i.stack.imgur.com/1DZ6X.jpg');
}
check it out here
Add a z-index value to the <img> and the <h2>. For example, z-index:98 on the <img>, and z-index:99 for the <h2>. (A higher value because you want it on top).
I would also recommend moving all styles to a css file, rather than use the inline style attribute.

Why hidden input is affecting my layout? LF Explanation

I needed to use an hidden input to transfer some IDs to the page for each block.. whatever.
I have the following code :
<div id="shipping_box" class="formSep well">
<div id="default_shipping_box" class="shipping_box row-fluid">
<div class="span1">
<input type="hidden" name="tracking_id" value="" />
</div>
</div>
</div>
This code work well and the result is what I expected.
If I do this :
<div id="shipping_box" class="formSep well">
<div id="default_shipping_box" class="shipping_box row-fluid">
<input type="hidden" name="tracking_id" value="" />
<div class="span1">
</div>
</div>
</div>
The layout is not respected. See this picture for the demostration :
Can someone explain why to me ? Hidden input aren't suppose to be "hidden" so they shouldn't affect the layout ?
jsfiddle : http://jsfiddle.net/t9M3C/
Near line 285
Is because you have a css rule (in bootstrap.min.css file) that match the firs-child element (but only if has a class*="span") inside the default_shipping_box div.
.row-fluid [class*="span"]:first-child {
margin-left: 0;
}
So, if you put your hidden input inside the div#default_shipping_box and before the first span, then that rule is not styling the div.span1 and thats why your template is been afected.
You can fixed adding a simple css rule to the same file...
.row-fluid .span1{margin-left:0 !important;}
The important, is because you have more files who overite this rule (ex. in bootstrap-responsive.min.css)
Good luck, and i hope it helps
cheers,
Gmo.-
EDIT:
Too slow XD.
Answered while writing ... I agree with the reason explained above.
Using Google Chrome's Inspest Plugin, when you move the input this class:
.row-fluid [class*="span"]:first-child {
margin-left: 0;
}
Gets removed.
This is because in this:
<div id="shipping_box" class="formSep well">
<div id="default_shipping_box" class="shipping_box row-fluid">
<input type="hidden" name="tracking_id" value="" />
<div class="span1">
</div>
</div>
</div>
This : <div class="span1"> is not the first child, this: <input type="hidden" name="tracking_id" value="" /> is.
and in your CSS this is that default class for [class*="span"] is:
[class*="span"] {
float: left;
margin-left: 30px;
}
So use this for example :
.row-fluid .span1 {
margin-left:0 !important;
}
Hope this helps.
Bootstrap has some CSS that will set the left-margin of the first of the child to 0, if the class contains span:
.row-fluid [class*="span"]:first-child {
margin-left: 0;
}
When the hidden input is put above the first span div, the above margin-left: 0; property will not be applied.
The following image shows that when the hidden input is before, then the first span class has a left-margin.
This shows that when the hidden input is after the div, that there is no left-margin.
EDIT: I seem to have a been beaten twice, while I was getting the screenshots to illustrate the difference!

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