Setting the width of inline elements

Solution 1:

There's also the option of display: inline-block, which might give you the best of both worlds.

Solution 2:

a) The width of an inline element is ignored

b,c) When you "position" an inline element (I assume that means using position:absolute), you are actually making it a block element, whose width is interpreted by the browser

Solution 3:

As others have mentioned, setting the width (or some other position-related property) of an inline element will cause the browser to then display the element as a block element.

You can explicitly declare this sort of behavior through using the CSS display property. The most common settings are display: inline (default), display: block, and display: none.
A full reference for the display property is available here.

However, it should be noted that the HTML 4.01 specification discourages the use of "overriding the conventional interpretation of HTML elements":

Style sheets provide the means to specify the rendering of arbitrary elements, including whether an element is rendered as block or inline. In some cases, such as an inline style for list elements, this may be appropriate, but generally speaking, authors are discouraged from overriding the conventional interpretation of HTML elements in this way.