There may be a simple fix for this, but it has troubled me for ages now...
Let me explain the situation. I have a div with the ID 'container' that holds all the contents in the page (including header and footer also) that will keep everything inline and I can do just 1 simple 'margin:0 auto;' instead of multiples. So lets say that I have the width of #container set to 80%. Now if I put another div inside with the same width (80%) and give it the ID of 'header' with 10px of padding all around, the layout would "break" (so to speak) because the page adds the padding amount onto the width. So, how can I make it stay in-bounds without using methods such as a lower percentage for the #header div? Basically, I want to make it fluid.
Here is some example code to give you an idea of what I am talking about...
CSS
#container {
position:relative;
width:80%;
height:auto;
}
#header {
position:relative;
width:80%;
height:50px;
padding:10px;
}
HTML
<div id="container">
<div id="header">Header contents</div>
</div>
Can anyone help me out with this issue that has been bugging me forever?
If you want the #header
to be the same width as your container, with 10px of padding, you can leave out its width declaration. That will cause it to implicitly take up its entire parent's width (since a div is by default a block level element).
Then, since you haven't defined a width on it, the 10px of padding will be properly applied inside the element, rather than adding to its width:
#container {
position: relative;
width: 80%;
}
#header {
position: relative;
height: 50px;
padding: 10px;
}
You can see it in action here.
The key when using percentage widths and pixel padding/margins is not to define them on the same element (if you want to accurately control the size). Apply the percentage width to the parent and then the pixel padding/margin to a display: block
child with no width set.
Update
Another option for dealing with this is to use the box-sizing CSS rule:
#container {
-webkit-box-sizing: border-box; /* Safari/Chrome, other WebKit */
-moz-box-sizing: border-box; /* Firefox, other Gecko */
box-sizing: border-box; /* Opera/IE 8+ */
/* Since this element now uses border-box sizing, the 10px of horizontal
padding will be drawn inside the 80% width */
width: 80%;
padding: 0 10px;
}
Here's a post talking about how box-sizing works.
Try removing the position
from header
and add overflow
to container
:
#container {
position:relative;
width:80%;
height:auto;
overflow:auto;
}
#header {
width:80%;
height:50px;
padding:10px;
}
You can also use the CSS calc() function to subtract the width of your padding from the percentage of your container's width.
An example:
width: calc((100%) - (32px))
Just be sure to make the subtracted width equal to the total padding, not just one half. If you pad both sides of the inner div with 16px, then you should subtract 32px from the final width, assuming that the example below is what you want to achieve.
.outer {
width: 200px;
height: 120px;
background-color: black;
}
.inner {
height: 40px;
top: 30px;
position: relative;
padding: 16px;
background-color: teal;
}
#inner-1 {
width: 100%;
}
#inner-2 {
width: calc((100%) - (32px));
}
<div class="outer" id="outer-1">
<div class="inner" id="inner-1"> width of 100% </div>
</div>
<br>
<br>
<div class="outer" id="outer-2">
<div class="inner" id="inner-2"> width of 100% - 16px </div>
</div>