Stacking context example 1
Description
Let's start with a basic example. In the root stacking context, there are two relatively positioned <div>
elements (DIV #1 and DIV #3) without z-index
properties. Inside DIV #1, there is an absolutely positioned DIV #2, while in DIV #3, there is an absolutely positioned DIV #4, both without z-index
properties.
The only stacking context is the root context. Without z-index
values, elements are stacked in order of occurrence.
If DIV #2 is assigned a positive (non-zero and non-auto) z-index value, it is rendered above all the other DIVs.
Then if DIV #4 is also assigned a positive z-index greater than DIV #2's z-index, it is rendered above all the other DIVs including DIV #2.
In this last example you can see that DIV #2 and DIV #4 are not siblings, because they belong to different parents in the HTML elements' hierarchy. Even so, stacking of DIV #4 with respect of DIV #2 can be controlled through z-index
. It happens that, since DIV #1 and DIV #3 are not assigned any z-index value, they do not create a stacking context. This means that all their content, including DIV #2 and DIV #4, belongs to the same root stacking context.
In terms of stacking contexts, DIV #1 and DIV #3 are assimilated into the root element, and the resulting hierarchy is the following:
- Root stacking context
- DIV #2 (
z-index
: 1) - DIV #4 (
z-index
: 2)
- DIV #2 (
Note: DIV #1 and DIV #3 are not translucent. It is important to remember that assigning an opacity less than 1 to a positioned element implicitly creates a stacking context, just like adding a z-index
value. And this example shows what happens when a parent element does not create a stacking context.
Example
HTML
<div id="div1">
<br /><span class="bold">DIV #1</span> <br />position: relative;
<div id="div2">
<br /><span class="bold">DIV #2</span> <br />position: absolute;
<br />z-index: 1;
</div>
</div>
<br />
<div id="div3">
<br /><span class="bold">DIV #3</span> <br />position: relative;
<div id="div4">
<br /><span class="bold">DIV #4</span> <br />position: absolute;
<br />z-index: 2;
</div>
</div>
CSS
.bold {
font-family: Arial;
font-size: 12px;
font-weight: bold;
}
#div1,
#div3 {
height: 80px;
position: relative;
border: 1px dashed #669966;
background-color: #ccffcc;
padding-left: 5px;
}
#div2 {
opacity: 0.8;
z-index: 1;
position: absolute;
width: 150px;
height: 200px;
top: 20px;
left: 170px;
border: 1px dashed #990000;
background-color: #ffdddd;
text-align: center;
}
#div4 {
opacity: 0.8;
z-index: 2;
position: absolute;
width: 200px;
height: 80px;
top: 65px;
left: 50px;
border: 1px dashed #000099;
background-color: #ddddff;
text-align: left;
padding-left: 10px;
}
Result
See also
- Stacking without the z-index property: The stacking rules that apply when
z-index
is not used. - Stacking floating elements: How floating elements are handled with stacking.
- Using z-index: How to use
z-index
to change default stacking. - Stacking context: Notes on the stacking context.
- Stacking context example 2: 2-level HTML hierarchy,
z-index
on all levels - Stacking context example 3: 3-level HTML hierarchy,
z-index
on the second level