I have done some testing and from what I can see there is a bug in mobile Safari on ios6.
When adding overflow:hidden
on the body
tag and moving an element out of the body using transform:translateX(100%);
It creates an extra scrollable space for that element.
On all desktop browsers it is "hidden".
Here is a demo: http://jsfiddle.net/mUB5d/1 . Open that in Mobile safari and you will see what is wrong.
Could anyone take a look at safari 6 on Mac OS to see if the bug is present there too? Does anybody know of any workaround besides creating another parent around my element?
Thanks for your feedback!
for me it works
I have implemented in the left side menu
This is normal behaviour on iOS (and iOS only). You can work around it by declaring
overflow: hidden
on bothhtml
andbody
element. In addition, you should set the body toposition: relative
.Overflow behaviour
There are several things at play here. To understand why the fix works, we first need to have a look at how the overflow of the viewport is set.
html
element.html
element at its default (visible
), the overflow setting of the body gets applied to the viewport, too. Ie, you can set eitherhtml
orbody
tooverflow: hidden
when you target the viewport. The overflow behaviour of the body element itself is unaffected - so far.html
element to anything other thanvisible
, the transfer frombody
to viewport does no longer happen. In your particular case, if you set both overflows tohidden
, the setting of thehtml
element gets applied to the viewport, and thebody
element hides its overflow as well.That's actually the case in every reasonably modern browser out there, and not specific to iOS.
iOS quirks
Now, iOS ignores
overflow: hidden
on the viewport. The browser reserves the right to show the content as a whole, no matter what you declare in the CSS. This is intentional and not a bug, and continues to be the case in iOS 7 and 8. There is nothing anyone can do about it, either - it can't be turned off.But you can work around it by making the body element itself, not the viewport, hide its overflow. To make it happen, you must first set the overflow of the
html
element to anything other thanvisible
, e.g. toauto
orhidden
(in iOS, there is no difference between the two). That way, the body overflow setting doesn't get transferred to the viewport and actually sticks to the body element when you set it tooverflow: hidden
.With that in place, most content is hidden. But there still is an exception: elements which are positioned absolutely. Their ultimate offset parent is the viewport, not the body. If they are positioned somewhere off screen, to the right or to the bottom, you can still scroll to them. To guard against that, you can simply set the body element to
position: relative
, which makes it the offset parent of positioned content and prevents those elements from breaking out of the body box.Answering in code
There is one final gotcha to watch out for: the body itself must not be larger than the viewport.
So the body needs to be set to 100% of the viewport width and height. (The credit for a CSS-only way to achieve it goes to this SO answer.) Margins on the
html
andbody
elements have to be 0, and thehtml
must not have padding or a border, either.Finally, in order to deal with body padding, and in case you ever want to set a border on the body, make the math work with
box-sizing: border-box
for the body.So here goes.
NB You can set body padding and border as you please.
Nope. Safari 6 on Mac does not present with the bug. Scrollbars are not present.
I ran it on OSX Mountain Lion (10.8.2)
To further answer your question, the reason this is happening probably has more to do with Mobile Safari's zoom rendering than an overflow hidden bug. The element is in fact being hidden off screen (notice below where I have scrolled over to the right all the way, it still doesn't show me the full 100% width element - 90% of it is in fact being hidden.
It likely has something to do with iframes, and page zoom. Still looks like a bug though.
I'm assuming you're demonstrating in JSFiddle from a real life example. If you go back to your real life example (apart from iframe territory), try adding this meta tag to the head if you don't already have it, and see it this helps:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
After struggling with this for a while I've found that both
html
andbody
tags need overflow hidden to actually hide the overflowing contents. On elements insidebody
overflow hidden works fine, so our choice is an extra css rule or a wrapper element.