To put an image as a background in CSS seems a little overwhelming since the images position won't be as perfect as we want it. Whether to put an image on a specific part of the screen or to cover the whole screen as a background, following a little rule would make it a lot easier.
For a full background we would put the property on the body tag, so it can can be applied through the whole page, but that is not a good idea to do that if we are building a website that we actually scroll. In order for that to happen we need to wrap the whole thing in a div or a section tag. And give that a class or an id and give the property using css. The property on the css on an element that has a class of showcase would look like..
.showcase{ background: url('./showcase.jpg'); //the image must be on the same directory...if it was on another folder we would have to change the url. If that is hard, contact me through @jamesScript i would personally guide you through that.
.showcase{ Background: url('showcase.jpg'); background-size: cover; //makes the image not be cropped Background-repeat: no-repeat; //this would make the image not get repeated and look horrendous. Background-position: center; //this will position it at the center height: 100vh; //this would give it the height of the whole screens, if you consider the screen as a 100 slices saying 100vh means saying 100 slices, saying 50vh means half the screens half slice.. These properties would position the image as the screen background..
To put an image as a background in CSS seems a little overwhelming since the images position won't be as perfect as we want it. Whether to put an image on a specific part of the screen or to cover the whole screen as a background, following a little rule would make it a lot easier.
For a full background we would put the property on the body tag, so it can can be applied through the whole page, but that is not a good idea to do that if we are building a website that we actually scroll. In order for that to happen we need to wrap the whole thing in a div or a section tag. And give that a class or an id and give the property using css. The property on the css on an element that has a class of showcase would look like..
.showcase{ background: url('./showcase.jpg'); //the image must be on the same directory...if it was on another folder we would have to change the url. If that is hard, contact me through @jamesScript i would personally guide you through that.
.showcase{ Background: url('showcase.jpg'); background-size: cover; //makes the image not be cropped Background-repeat: no-repeat; //this would make the image not get repeated and look horrendous. Background-position: center; //this will position it at the center height: 100vh; //this would give it the height of the whole screens, if you consider the screen as a 100 slices saying 100vh means saying 100 slices, saying 50vh means half the screens half slice.. These properties would position the image as the screen background..
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That strategy is the acquisition of a value-priced company by a growth company. Using the growth company's higher-priced stock for the acquisition can produce outsized revenue and earnings growth. Even better is the use of cash, particularly in a growth period when financial aggressiveness is accepted and even positively viewed.he key public rationale behind this strategy is synergy - the 1+1=3 view. In many cases, synergy does occur and is valuable. However, in other cases, particularly as the strategy gains popularity, it doesn't. Joining two different organizations, workforces and cultures is a challenge. Simply putting two separate organizations together necessarily creates disruptions and conflicts that can undermine both operations.
Spiking bond yields driving sharp losses in tech stocks
A spike in interest rates since the start of the year has accelerated a rotation out of high-growth technology stocks and into value stocks poised to benefit from a reopening of the economy. The Nasdaq has fallen more than 10% over the past month as the Dow has soared to record highs, with a spike in the 10-year US Treasury yield acting as the main catalyst. It recently surged to a cycle high of more than 1.60% after starting the year below 1%. But according to Jim Paulsen, the Leuthold Group's chief investment strategist, rising interest rates do not represent a long-term threat to the stock market. Paulsen expects the 10-year yield to cross 2% by the end of the year.
A spike in interest rates and its impact on the stock market depends on the economic backdrop, according to Paulsen. Rising interest rates amid a strengthening economy "may prove no challenge at all for stocks," Paulsen said.