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+# Menu Toggle with Pure CSS
+
+2020-10-19
+
+When thinking through navigation designs for mobile devices sometimes the best option is to store away the content behind a toggle button. This button would then display the menu items upon interaction. Let me show you how to create such an element with only CSS - no need for JavaScript today!
+
+## Before we begin
+
+I would like to point out that the concept of "toggling" the main menu (even for mobile) is not always the best solution. If you're interested, you can take a look at a previous article I wrote explaining why: [Using Hamburger Menus? Try Sausage Links](/hamburger-menu-alternative.html)
+
+Now that we have mentioned possible pitfalls of relying so heavily on toggle menus, let's build one!
+
+## Our Final Product
+
+![Menu toggle made from pure CSS](/public/images/menu-toggle-css.png)
+
+[Live CodePen Example](https://codepen.io/bradleytaunt/pen/mdEEvEX)
+
+## The HTML
+
+To implement this design you really don't need much in terms of HTML:
+
+- A single `checkbox` input
+- A `label` that corresponds to the `checkbox`
+- A `nav` element to house our unordered list items
+
+
+ <!-- The checkbox input & label partner -->
+ <input type="checkbox" id="menu-toggle">
+ <label for="menu-toggle">Menu</label>
+
+ <!-- The navigation we wish to toggle -->
+ <nav>
+ <ul>
+ <li><a href="">Home</a></li>
+ <li><a href="">About</a></li>
+ <li><a href="">Articles</a></li>
+ <li><a href="">Colophon</a></li>
+ <li><a href="">Contact</a></li>
+ </ul>
+ </nav>
+
+
+That's it!
+
+## The CSS
+
+The first thing we need to do is "hide" the `checkbox` input element. It's important to avoid using `display: none` or `visibility: hidden` in order to achieve this. Those CSS properties can negatively impact accessibility (specifically screen readers). So we will be relying on the `position`, `z-index` and `opacity` properties to help us out.
+
+
+ /* Set the input position to absolute, send it off screen with zero opacity */
+ input[type="checkbox"] {
+ left: -9999px;
+ opacity: 0;
+ position: absolute;
+ }
+
+
+Then we give our corresponding `label` a minor face-lift to make it appear more button-like:
+
+
+ /* Minor visual styling to make the label more button-y */
+ label {
+ border: 1px solid currentColor;
+ border-radius: 4px;
+ cursor: pointer;
+ padding: 10px;
+ }
+
+
+For our main `nav` element, we want to set it's position to `absolute` in order to avoid any janky page rendering issues that might occur when toggling the menu:
+
+`
+ /* Set nav to absolute (avoids odd page rendering space pop-in) */
+ nav {
+ opacity: 0;
+ position: absolute;
+ z-index: -2;
+ }
+
+
+The last step is to actually *show* the menu if the user toggles the `checkbox`:
+
+
+ /* Show nav when checkbox is checked */
+ input[type="checkbox"]:checked ~ nav {
+ opacity: 1;
+ z-index: 1;
+ }
+
+
+It might not look like much, but you now have a fully functional menu toggle - **made with pure CSS**!
+
+## With Great Power...
+
+Although this design is very simple to implement, please remember to use these types of menus wisely. Just because you *can* do something, doesn't always mean you *should*.