I have a div containing a sidebar. I would like the sidebar's height to be 100% (of the parent div). For now it is only high as the content it has.
#parent {
height: 100%;
}
#sidebar {
height: 100%;
}
When you set the height to 100%, it's 100% of what? The parent might be set to 100% but what quantity is that? While html is set to the height of the viewport, your parent div must be set to something with a set height in real numbers, or inherit it from its parent.
Sorry 100% only apply to width does not apply to height you can try a jquery approach instead
html_height = $("#parent").height();
$('#sidebar').height(html_height);
with this unless you have a padding/margin on the side bar the height should be okay
There are many possibilities to realise this.
The easiest way is to set the height of <html> and <body> to 100%.
HTML
<div id=parent>
<div id=sidebar></div>
</div>
CSS
html,body{height:100%}
#parent {
height: 100%;
background: #222 /* not needed */
}
#sidebar {
width: 200px; /* not needed */
height: 100%;
background: #444 /* not needed */
}
DEMO
EDIT
overflow:auto fixes the problem too height content:
DEMO
Related
I am trying to set a <div> to a certain percentage height in CSS, but it just remains the same size as the content inside it. When I remove the HTML 5 <!DOCTYTPE html> however, it works, the <div> taking up the whole page as desired. I want the page to validate, so what should I do?
I have this CSS on the <div>, which has an ID of page:
#page {
padding: 10px;
background-color: white;
height: 90% !important;
}
I am trying to set a div to a certain percentage height in CSS
Percentage of what?
To set a percentage height, its parent element(*) must have an explicit height. This is fairly self-evident, in that if you leave height as auto, the block will take the height of its content... but if the content itself has a height expressed in terms of percentage of the parent you've made yourself a little Catch 22. The browser gives up and just uses the content height.
So the parent of the div must have an explicit height property. Whilst that height can also be a percentage if you want, that just moves the problem up to the next level.
If you want to make the div height a percentage of the viewport height, every ancestor of the div, including <html> and <body>, have to have height: 100%, so there is a chain of explicit percentage heights down to the div.
(*: or, if the div is positioned, the ‘containing block’, which is the nearest ancestor to also be positioned.)
Alternatively, all modern browsers and IE>=9 support new CSS units relative to viewport height (vh) and viewport width (vw):
div {
height:100vh;
}
See here for more info.
You need to set the height on the <html> and <body> elements as well; otherwise, they will only be large enough to fit the content. For example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>Example of 100% width and height</title>
<style>
html, body { height: 100%; margin: 0; }
div { height: 100%; width: 100%; background: red; }
</style>
<div></div>
bobince's answer will let you know in which cases "height: XX%;" will or won't work.
If you want to create an element with a set ratio (height: % of it's own width), use the aspect-ratio property. Make sure height is not explicitly set on the element for it to work. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/aspect-ratio
.square {
width: 100%;
height: unset;
aspect-ratio: 1 / 1;
}
Historically, the best way to do this was to set the height using padding-bottom. Example for square:
<div class="square-container">
<div class="square-content">
<!-- put your content in here -->
</div>
</div>
.square-container { /* any display: block; element */
position: relative;
height: 0;
padding-bottom: 100%; /* of parent width */
}
.square-content {
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
The square container will just be made of padding, and the content will expand to fill the container. Long article from 2009 on this subject: http://alistapart.com/article/creating-intrinsic-ratios-for-video
In order to use percentage(%), you must define the % of its parent element. If you use body{height: 100%} it will not work because its parent have no percentage in height. In that case in order to work that body height you must add this in html{height:100%}
In other cases to get rid of that defining parent percentage you can use
body{height:100vh}
vh stands for viewport height
You can use 100vw / 100vh. CSS3 gives us viewport-relative units. 100vw means 100% of the viewport width. 100vh; 100% of the height.
<div style="display:flex; justify-content: space-between;background-color: lightyellow; width:100%; height:85vh">
<div style="width:70%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
<div style="width:30%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
</div>
Sometimes, you may want to conditionally set the height of a div, such as when the entire content is less than the height of the screen. Setting all parent elements to 100% will cut off content when it is longer than the screen size.
So, the way to get around this is to set the min-height:
Continue to let the parent elements automatically adjust their height
Then in your main div, subtract the pixel sizes of the header and footer div from 100vh (viewport units). In css, something like:
min-height: calc(100vh - 246px);
100vh is full length of the screen, minus the surrounding divs.
By setting min-height and not height, content longer than screen will continue to flow, instead of getting cut off.
With new CSS sizing properties you can get away with not setting exact height on parent. The new block-size and inline-size properties can be used like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<style>
#parent {
border: 1px dotted gray;
height: auto; /* auto values */
width: auto;
}
#wrapper {
background-color: violet;
writing-mode: vertical-lr;
block-size: 30%;
inline-size: 70%;
}
#child {
background-color: wheat;
writing-mode: horizontal-tb;
width: 30%; /* set to 100% if you don't want to expose wrapper */
height: 70%; /* none of the parent has exact height set */
}
</style>
<body>
<div id=parent>
<div id=wrapper>
<div id=child>Lorem ipsum dollar...</div>
Resize the browser window in full page mode. I think the values are relative to viewport height and width.
For more info refer: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-sizing-3/
Almost all browsers support it: https://caniuse.com/?search=inline-size
I am trying to set a <div> to a certain percentage height in CSS, but it just remains the same size as the content inside it. When I remove the HTML 5 <!DOCTYTPE html> however, it works, the <div> taking up the whole page as desired. I want the page to validate, so what should I do?
I have this CSS on the <div>, which has an ID of page:
#page {
padding: 10px;
background-color: white;
height: 90% !important;
}
I am trying to set a div to a certain percentage height in CSS
Percentage of what?
To set a percentage height, its parent element(*) must have an explicit height. This is fairly self-evident, in that if you leave height as auto, the block will take the height of its content... but if the content itself has a height expressed in terms of percentage of the parent you've made yourself a little Catch 22. The browser gives up and just uses the content height.
So the parent of the div must have an explicit height property. Whilst that height can also be a percentage if you want, that just moves the problem up to the next level.
If you want to make the div height a percentage of the viewport height, every ancestor of the div, including <html> and <body>, have to have height: 100%, so there is a chain of explicit percentage heights down to the div.
(*: or, if the div is positioned, the ‘containing block’, which is the nearest ancestor to also be positioned.)
Alternatively, all modern browsers and IE>=9 support new CSS units relative to viewport height (vh) and viewport width (vw):
div {
height:100vh;
}
See here for more info.
You need to set the height on the <html> and <body> elements as well; otherwise, they will only be large enough to fit the content. For example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>Example of 100% width and height</title>
<style>
html, body { height: 100%; margin: 0; }
div { height: 100%; width: 100%; background: red; }
</style>
<div></div>
bobince's answer will let you know in which cases "height: XX%;" will or won't work.
If you want to create an element with a set ratio (height: % of it's own width), use the aspect-ratio property. Make sure height is not explicitly set on the element for it to work. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/aspect-ratio
.square {
width: 100%;
height: unset;
aspect-ratio: 1 / 1;
}
Historically, the best way to do this was to set the height using padding-bottom. Example for square:
<div class="square-container">
<div class="square-content">
<!-- put your content in here -->
</div>
</div>
.square-container { /* any display: block; element */
position: relative;
height: 0;
padding-bottom: 100%; /* of parent width */
}
.square-content {
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
The square container will just be made of padding, and the content will expand to fill the container. Long article from 2009 on this subject: http://alistapart.com/article/creating-intrinsic-ratios-for-video
In order to use percentage(%), you must define the % of its parent element. If you use body{height: 100%} it will not work because its parent have no percentage in height. In that case in order to work that body height you must add this in html{height:100%}
In other cases to get rid of that defining parent percentage you can use
body{height:100vh}
vh stands for viewport height
You can use 100vw / 100vh. CSS3 gives us viewport-relative units. 100vw means 100% of the viewport width. 100vh; 100% of the height.
<div style="display:flex; justify-content: space-between;background-color: lightyellow; width:100%; height:85vh">
<div style="width:70%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
<div style="width:30%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
</div>
Sometimes, you may want to conditionally set the height of a div, such as when the entire content is less than the height of the screen. Setting all parent elements to 100% will cut off content when it is longer than the screen size.
So, the way to get around this is to set the min-height:
Continue to let the parent elements automatically adjust their height
Then in your main div, subtract the pixel sizes of the header and footer div from 100vh (viewport units). In css, something like:
min-height: calc(100vh - 246px);
100vh is full length of the screen, minus the surrounding divs.
By setting min-height and not height, content longer than screen will continue to flow, instead of getting cut off.
With new CSS sizing properties you can get away with not setting exact height on parent. The new block-size and inline-size properties can be used like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<style>
#parent {
border: 1px dotted gray;
height: auto; /* auto values */
width: auto;
}
#wrapper {
background-color: violet;
writing-mode: vertical-lr;
block-size: 30%;
inline-size: 70%;
}
#child {
background-color: wheat;
writing-mode: horizontal-tb;
width: 30%; /* set to 100% if you don't want to expose wrapper */
height: 70%; /* none of the parent has exact height set */
}
</style>
<body>
<div id=parent>
<div id=wrapper>
<div id=child>Lorem ipsum dollar...</div>
Resize the browser window in full page mode. I think the values are relative to viewport height and width.
For more info refer: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-sizing-3/
Almost all browsers support it: https://caniuse.com/?search=inline-size
I am trying to set a <div> to a certain percentage height in CSS, but it just remains the same size as the content inside it. When I remove the HTML 5 <!DOCTYTPE html> however, it works, the <div> taking up the whole page as desired. I want the page to validate, so what should I do?
I have this CSS on the <div>, which has an ID of page:
#page {
padding: 10px;
background-color: white;
height: 90% !important;
}
I am trying to set a div to a certain percentage height in CSS
Percentage of what?
To set a percentage height, its parent element(*) must have an explicit height. This is fairly self-evident, in that if you leave height as auto, the block will take the height of its content... but if the content itself has a height expressed in terms of percentage of the parent you've made yourself a little Catch 22. The browser gives up and just uses the content height.
So the parent of the div must have an explicit height property. Whilst that height can also be a percentage if you want, that just moves the problem up to the next level.
If you want to make the div height a percentage of the viewport height, every ancestor of the div, including <html> and <body>, have to have height: 100%, so there is a chain of explicit percentage heights down to the div.
(*: or, if the div is positioned, the ‘containing block’, which is the nearest ancestor to also be positioned.)
Alternatively, all modern browsers and IE>=9 support new CSS units relative to viewport height (vh) and viewport width (vw):
div {
height:100vh;
}
See here for more info.
You need to set the height on the <html> and <body> elements as well; otherwise, they will only be large enough to fit the content. For example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>Example of 100% width and height</title>
<style>
html, body { height: 100%; margin: 0; }
div { height: 100%; width: 100%; background: red; }
</style>
<div></div>
bobince's answer will let you know in which cases "height: XX%;" will or won't work.
If you want to create an element with a set ratio (height: % of it's own width), use the aspect-ratio property. Make sure height is not explicitly set on the element for it to work. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/aspect-ratio
.square {
width: 100%;
height: unset;
aspect-ratio: 1 / 1;
}
Historically, the best way to do this was to set the height using padding-bottom. Example for square:
<div class="square-container">
<div class="square-content">
<!-- put your content in here -->
</div>
</div>
.square-container { /* any display: block; element */
position: relative;
height: 0;
padding-bottom: 100%; /* of parent width */
}
.square-content {
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
The square container will just be made of padding, and the content will expand to fill the container. Long article from 2009 on this subject: http://alistapart.com/article/creating-intrinsic-ratios-for-video
In order to use percentage(%), you must define the % of its parent element. If you use body{height: 100%} it will not work because its parent have no percentage in height. In that case in order to work that body height you must add this in html{height:100%}
In other cases to get rid of that defining parent percentage you can use
body{height:100vh}
vh stands for viewport height
You can use 100vw / 100vh. CSS3 gives us viewport-relative units. 100vw means 100% of the viewport width. 100vh; 100% of the height.
<div style="display:flex; justify-content: space-between;background-color: lightyellow; width:100%; height:85vh">
<div style="width:70%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
<div style="width:30%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
</div>
Sometimes, you may want to conditionally set the height of a div, such as when the entire content is less than the height of the screen. Setting all parent elements to 100% will cut off content when it is longer than the screen size.
So, the way to get around this is to set the min-height:
Continue to let the parent elements automatically adjust their height
Then in your main div, subtract the pixel sizes of the header and footer div from 100vh (viewport units). In css, something like:
min-height: calc(100vh - 246px);
100vh is full length of the screen, minus the surrounding divs.
By setting min-height and not height, content longer than screen will continue to flow, instead of getting cut off.
With new CSS sizing properties you can get away with not setting exact height on parent. The new block-size and inline-size properties can be used like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<style>
#parent {
border: 1px dotted gray;
height: auto; /* auto values */
width: auto;
}
#wrapper {
background-color: violet;
writing-mode: vertical-lr;
block-size: 30%;
inline-size: 70%;
}
#child {
background-color: wheat;
writing-mode: horizontal-tb;
width: 30%; /* set to 100% if you don't want to expose wrapper */
height: 70%; /* none of the parent has exact height set */
}
</style>
<body>
<div id=parent>
<div id=wrapper>
<div id=child>Lorem ipsum dollar...</div>
Resize the browser window in full page mode. I think the values are relative to viewport height and width.
For more info refer: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-sizing-3/
Almost all browsers support it: https://caniuse.com/?search=inline-size
I am trying to set a <div> to a certain percentage height in CSS, but it just remains the same size as the content inside it. When I remove the HTML 5 <!DOCTYTPE html> however, it works, the <div> taking up the whole page as desired. I want the page to validate, so what should I do?
I have this CSS on the <div>, which has an ID of page:
#page {
padding: 10px;
background-color: white;
height: 90% !important;
}
I am trying to set a div to a certain percentage height in CSS
Percentage of what?
To set a percentage height, its parent element(*) must have an explicit height. This is fairly self-evident, in that if you leave height as auto, the block will take the height of its content... but if the content itself has a height expressed in terms of percentage of the parent you've made yourself a little Catch 22. The browser gives up and just uses the content height.
So the parent of the div must have an explicit height property. Whilst that height can also be a percentage if you want, that just moves the problem up to the next level.
If you want to make the div height a percentage of the viewport height, every ancestor of the div, including <html> and <body>, have to have height: 100%, so there is a chain of explicit percentage heights down to the div.
(*: or, if the div is positioned, the ‘containing block’, which is the nearest ancestor to also be positioned.)
Alternatively, all modern browsers and IE>=9 support new CSS units relative to viewport height (vh) and viewport width (vw):
div {
height:100vh;
}
See here for more info.
You need to set the height on the <html> and <body> elements as well; otherwise, they will only be large enough to fit the content. For example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<title>Example of 100% width and height</title>
<style>
html, body { height: 100%; margin: 0; }
div { height: 100%; width: 100%; background: red; }
</style>
<div></div>
bobince's answer will let you know in which cases "height: XX%;" will or won't work.
If you want to create an element with a set ratio (height: % of it's own width), use the aspect-ratio property. Make sure height is not explicitly set on the element for it to work. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/aspect-ratio
.square {
width: 100%;
height: unset;
aspect-ratio: 1 / 1;
}
Historically, the best way to do this was to set the height using padding-bottom. Example for square:
<div class="square-container">
<div class="square-content">
<!-- put your content in here -->
</div>
</div>
.square-container { /* any display: block; element */
position: relative;
height: 0;
padding-bottom: 100%; /* of parent width */
}
.square-content {
position: absolute;
left: 0;
top: 0;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
The square container will just be made of padding, and the content will expand to fill the container. Long article from 2009 on this subject: http://alistapart.com/article/creating-intrinsic-ratios-for-video
In order to use percentage(%), you must define the % of its parent element. If you use body{height: 100%} it will not work because its parent have no percentage in height. In that case in order to work that body height you must add this in html{height:100%}
In other cases to get rid of that defining parent percentage you can use
body{height:100vh}
vh stands for viewport height
You can use 100vw / 100vh. CSS3 gives us viewport-relative units. 100vw means 100% of the viewport width. 100vh; 100% of the height.
<div style="display:flex; justify-content: space-between;background-color: lightyellow; width:100%; height:85vh">
<div style="width:70%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
<div style="width:30%; height: 100%; border: 2px dashed red"></div>
</div>
Sometimes, you may want to conditionally set the height of a div, such as when the entire content is less than the height of the screen. Setting all parent elements to 100% will cut off content when it is longer than the screen size.
So, the way to get around this is to set the min-height:
Continue to let the parent elements automatically adjust their height
Then in your main div, subtract the pixel sizes of the header and footer div from 100vh (viewport units). In css, something like:
min-height: calc(100vh - 246px);
100vh is full length of the screen, minus the surrounding divs.
By setting min-height and not height, content longer than screen will continue to flow, instead of getting cut off.
With new CSS sizing properties you can get away with not setting exact height on parent. The new block-size and inline-size properties can be used like this:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<style>
#parent {
border: 1px dotted gray;
height: auto; /* auto values */
width: auto;
}
#wrapper {
background-color: violet;
writing-mode: vertical-lr;
block-size: 30%;
inline-size: 70%;
}
#child {
background-color: wheat;
writing-mode: horizontal-tb;
width: 30%; /* set to 100% if you don't want to expose wrapper */
height: 70%; /* none of the parent has exact height set */
}
</style>
<body>
<div id=parent>
<div id=wrapper>
<div id=child>Lorem ipsum dollar...</div>
Resize the browser window in full page mode. I think the values are relative to viewport height and width.
For more info refer: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-sizing-3/
Almost all browsers support it: https://caniuse.com/?search=inline-size
I'm trying to make a container fill the entire page (or the viewport, whichever is larger), but ran into some trouble. I'm using the recommendations from this post: https://stackoverflow.com/a/17555766, to set the <html> and <body> to 100% height.
But I've noticed that the .Content div only fills the viewport when the <body> height is set with height: 100%, but not with min-height: 100%. Why is that? Why doesn't .Content pick up the height of the <body> when it's set with min-height? Is there a fix for this (without absolute positioning or fixed heights)?
html
<html>
<body>
<div class="Content">Content</div>
</body>
</html>
css
* {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
html {
height: 100%;
}
body {
/* does not work for .Content: */
min-height: 100%;
/* does work for .Content: */
/* height: 100%; */
background: blue;
}
.Content {
background: red;
min-height: 100%;
}
codepen: http://codepen.io/anon/pen/mJEMVX
P.s.: when the <body> height is set with height: 100%, both min-height: 100% and height: 100% work as expected for .Content.
Percentage heights refer to the computed height property of the parent element. See the spec. When setting only min-height: 100% on the body element as per my answer to the linked question, the height property is left untouched at its default value of auto. The min-height property does not affect the computed value of the height property.
Because of this, min-height: 100% on your element does not have a parent height to refer to, and so it won't work. Once you set height: 100% on the body element, your element is able to refer to this height for its own percentage height calculation.
How to fix this depends on what sort of layout you're trying to achieve. The only purpose of setting min-height: 100% on the body element is to allow it to expand when the content height exceeds that of the viewport resulting in a scrollbar. If your content will only ever be exactly the height of the viewport, or you don't want body to generate scrollbars, it's as simple as replacing min-height: 100% with height: 100% on body.