I tried the following:
<div class="modal hide fade modal-admin" id="testModal" style="display: none;">
<div class="modal-header">
<a data-dismiss="modal" class="close">×</a>
<h3 id='dialog-heading'></h3>
</div>
<div class="modal-body">
<div id="dialog-data"></div>
</div>
<div class="modal-footer">
<a data-dismiss="modal" class="btn" >Close</a>
<a class="btn btn-primary" id="btnSaveChanges">Save changes</a>
</div>
</div>
And this Javascript:
$('.modal-admin').css('width', '750px');
$('.modal-admin').css('margin', '100px auto 100px auto');
$('.modal-admin').modal('show')
The result is not what I expected. The modal top left is positioned in the center of the screen.
Can anyone help me. Has anyone else tried this. I assume it’s not an unusual thing to want to do.
32 Answers
UPDATE:
In bootstrap 3
you need to change the modal-dialog.
So in this case you can add the class modal-admin
in the place where modal-dialog
stands.
Original Answer (Bootstrap < 3)
Is there a certain reason you’re trying to change it with JS/jQuery?
You can easily do it with just CSS, which means you don’t have to do your styling in the document.
In your own custom CSS file, you add:
body .modal {
/* new custom width */
width: 560px;
/* must be half of the width, minus scrollbar on the left (30px) */
margin-left: -280px;
}
In your case:
body .modal-admin {
/* new custom width */
width: 750px;
/* must be half of the width, minus scrollbar on the left (30px) */
margin-left: -375px;
}
The reason I put body before the selector is so that it takes a higher priority than the default. This way you can add it to an custom CSS file, and without worries update Bootstrap.