How can I position several <img>
elements into a circle around another and have those elements all be clickable links as well? I want it to look like the picture below, but I have no idea how to achieve that effect.
Is this even possible?
To create a circle we can set the border-radius on the element. This will create curved corners on the element. If we set it to 50% it will create a circle. If you set a different width and height we will get an oval instead.
There is no way to magically place clickable items in a circle around another element with CSS. The way how I would do this is by using a container with position:relative; . And then place all the elements with position:absolute; and using top and left to target it's place.
You can set the position of the small circles as position: absolute; and then play with top , left , right or bottom for placing them on the desired place. I recommend you to use % for setting the position so it will be responsive, but in the case the big circle size is static you can just set the position with px .
Here is the easy solution without absolute positioning:
.container .row { margin: 20px; text-align: center; } .container .row img { margin: 0 20px; }
<div class="container"> <div class="row"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> </div> <div class="row"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> </div> <div class="row"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> <img src="https://ssl.gstatic.com/s2/oz/images/faviconr2.ico" alt="" width="64" height="64"> </div> </div>
http://jsfiddle.net/mD6H6/
Here's a more modern solution I use these days.
I start off by generating the HTML starting from an array of images. Whether the HTML is generated using PHP, JS, some HTML preprocessor, whatever... this matters less as the basic idea behind is the same.
Here's the Pug code that would do this:
//- start with an array of images, described by url and alt text - let imgs = [ - { - src: 'image_url.jpg', - alt: 'image alt text' - } /* and so on, add more images here */ - ]; - let n_imgs = imgs.length; - let has_mid = 1; /* 0 if there's no item in the middle, 1 otherwise */ - let m = n_imgs - has_mid; /* how many are ON the circle */ - let tan = Math.tan(Math.PI/m); /* tangent of half the base angle */ .container(style=`--m: ${m}; --tan: ${+tan.toFixed(2)}`) - for(let i = 0; i < n_imgs; i++) a(href='#' style=i - has_mid >= 0 ? `--i: ${i}` : null) img(src=imgs[i].src alt=imgs[i].alt)
The generated HTML looks as follows (and yes, you can write the HTML manually too, but it's going to be a pain to make changes afterwards):
<div class="container" style="--m: 8; --tan: 0.41"> <a href='#'> <img src="image_mid.jpg" alt="alt text"/> </a> <a style="--i: 1"> <img src="first_img_on_circle.jpg" alt="alt text"/> </a> <!-- the rest of those placed on the circle --> </div>
In the CSS, we decide on a size for the images, let's say 8em
. The --m
items are positioned on a circle and it's if they're in the middle of the edges of a polygon of --m
edges, all of which are tangent to the circle.
If you have a hard time picturing that, you can play with this interactive demo which constructs the incircle and circumcircle for various polygons whose number of edges you pick by dragging the slider.
This tells us that the size of the container must be twice the radius of the circle plus twice half the size of the images.
We don't yet know the radius, but we can compute it if we know the number of edges (and therefore the tangent of half the base angle, precomputed and set as a custom property --tan
) and the polygon edge. We probably want the polygon edge to be a least the size of the images, but how much we leave on the sides is arbitrary. Let's say we have half the image size on each side, so the polygon edge is twice the image size. This gives us the following CSS:
.container { --d: 6.5em; /* image size */ --rel: 1; /* how much extra space we want between images, 1 = one image size */ --r: calc(.5*(1 + var(--rel))*var(--d)/var(--tan)); /* circle radius */ --s: calc(2*var(--r) + var(--d)); /* container size */ position: relative; width: var(--s); height: var(--s); background: silver /* to show images perfectly fit in container */ } .container a { position: absolute; top: 50%; left: 50%; margin: calc(-.5*var(--d)); width: var(--d); height: var(--d); --az: calc(var(--i)*1turn/var(--m)); transform: rotate(var(--az)) translate(var(--r)) rotate(calc(-1*var(--az))) } img { max-width: 100% }
See the old solution for an explanation of how the transform chain works.
This way, adding or removing an image from the array of images automatically arranges the new number of images on a circle such that they're equally spaced out and also adjusts the size of the container. You can test this in this demo.
Yes, it is very much possible and very simple using just CSS. You just need to have clear in mind the angles at which you want the links with the images (I've added a piece of code at the end just for showing the angles whenever you hover one of them).
You first need a wrapper. I set its diameter to be 24em
(width: 24em; height: 24em;
does that), you can set it to whatever you want. You give it position: relative;
.
You then position your links with the images in the center of that wrapper, both horizontally and vertically. You do that by setting position: absolute;
and then top: 50%; left: 50%;
and margin: -2em;
(where 2em
is half the width of the link with the image, which I've set to be 4em
- again, you can change it to whatever you wish, but don't forget to change the margin in that case).
You then decide on the angles at which you want to have your links with the images and you add a class deg{desired_angle}
(for example deg0
or deg45
or whatever). Then for each such class you apply chained CSS transforms, like this:
.deg{desired_angle} { transform: rotate({desired_angle}) translate(12em) rotate(-{desired_angle}); }
where you replace {desired_angle}
with 0
, 45
, and so on...
The first rotate transform rotates the object and its axes, the translate transform translates the object along the rotated X axis and the second rotate transform brings back the object into position.
The advantage of this method is that it is flexible. You can add new images at different angles without altering the current structure.
CODE SNIPPET
.circle-container { position: relative; width: 24em; height: 24em; padding: 2.8em; /*2.8em = 2em*1.4 (2em = half the width of a link with img, 1.4 = sqrt(2))*/ border: dashed 1px; border-radius: 50%; margin: 1.75em auto 0; } .circle-container a { display: block; position: absolute; top: 50%; left: 50%; width: 4em; height: 4em; margin: -2em; } .circle-container img { display: block; width: 100%; } .deg0 { transform: translate(12em); } /* 12em = half the width of the wrapper */ .deg45 { transform: rotate(45deg) translate(12em) rotate(-45deg); } .deg135 { transform: rotate(135deg) translate(12em) rotate(-135deg); } .deg180 { transform: translate(-12em); } .deg225 { transform: rotate(225deg) translate(12em) rotate(-225deg); } .deg315 { transform: rotate(315deg) translate(12em) rotate(-315deg); }
<div class='circle-container'> <a href='#' class='center'><img src='image.jpg'></a> <a href='#' class='deg0'><img src='image.jpg'></a> <a href='#' class='deg45'><img src='image.jpg'></a> <a href='#' class='deg135'><img src='image.jpg'></a> <a href='#' class='deg180'><img src='image.jpg'></a> <a href='#' class='deg225'><img src='image.jpg'></a> <a href='#' class='deg315'><img src='image.jpg'></a> </div>
Also, you could further simplify the HTML by using background images for the links instead of using img
tags.
EDIT: example with fallback for IE8 and older (tested in IE8 and IE7)
If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
Donate Us With