I'm seeing some interesting z-index behaviour on iOS.
My sample code can be viewed here: https://jsfiddle.net/59mo8s16/4/
I need the #sidebar to be displayed in front of the #slide-in-tip. This is the case when viewed on Chrome (PC and Android) and Firefox (PC). However, on iOS Safari and Chrome, #slide-in-tip appears in front of #sidebar.
I've realised that removing -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch from the CSS makes it appear as intended across all platforms/browsers. However, I need this in order to provide momentum scrolling for the #container div on iOS. Without it, you get that scrolling that stops as soon as you stop swiping, which provides a terrible user experience.
Any ideas on how to resolve this one? Ideally I'd like a CSS-only solution. Any significant restructure of HTML will cause me some major pain at this point. The sample is a really stripped back version of an already-complete website.
HTML:
html,
body {
height: 100%;
margin: 0;
-webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
}
#top-bar {
top: 0;
width: 100%;
z-index: 200;
background-color: green;
height: 85px;
position: absolute;
}
#sidebar {
float: left;
padding: 30px;
background-color: pink;
position: fixed;
width: 310px;
left: 0px;
z-index: 150;
top: 85px;
bottom: 0px;
padding: 0;
padding-bottom: 50px;
}
#container2 {
min-height: 100%;
}
#main {
padding-right: 20px;
height: 100%;
margin: 0;
margin-left: 10%;
line-height: 40px;
text-align: right;
}
#container {
height: 100%;
margin: 0;
position: absolute;
width: 100%;
overflow-y: scroll;
}
#container2 {
padding-top: 75px;
}
#slide-in-tip {
position: fixed;
bottom: 0;
text-align: right;
width: 100%;
z-index: 140;
background-color: blue;
height: 200px;
}
<div id="top-bar">
top-bar
</div>
<div id="container">
<div id="container2">
<div id="sidebar">
sidebar
</div>
<div id="main">
long content - see js fiddle for actual long content
</div>
</div>
</div>
<div id="slide-in-tip">
slide-in-tip
</div>
z-indexvalue, maybe 200 or so.