Position by center point, rather than top-left point

Is it possible to tell the code to position by the center point of an element, rather than by the top-left point? If my parent element has

width: 500px;

and my child element has

/*some width, for this example let's say it's 200px*/
position: absolute;
left: 50%;

one would assume that based on the 50% positioning, the child element will be in the middle of the parent, leaving 150px of free space on each side. However, it is not, since it is the top-left point of the child that goes to 50% of the parent's width, therefore the whole child's width of 200px goes to the right from there, leaving 250px of free space on the left and only 50px on the right.

So, my question is, how to achieve center positioning?

I found this solution:

position: absolute;
width: 200px;
left: 50%;
margin-left: -100px;

but I don't like it because you need to edit it manually for each element's width - I would like something that works globally.

(For example, when I work in Adobe After Effects, I can set a position for an object and then set specific anchor point of that object that will be put to that position. If the canvas is 1280px wide, you position an object to 640px and you choose the center of the object to be your anchor point, then the whole object will be centered within the 1280px wide canvas.)

I would imagine something like this in CSS:

position: absolute;
left: 50%;
horizontal-anchor: center;

Similarly, horizontal-anchor: right would position the element by its right side, so the whole content would be to the left from the point of its parent's 50% width.

And, the same would apply for vertical-anchor, you get it.

So, is something like this possible using only CSS (no scripting)?

Thanks!


Solution 1:

If the element must be absolutely positioned (so, margin: 0 auto; is of no use for centering), and scripting is out of the question, you could achieve this with CSS3 transforms.

.centered-block {
    width: 100px; 
    left: 50%; 
    transform: translate(-50%, 0); 
    position: absolute;
}

See this fiddle for some examples. The important parts: left: 50%; pushes block halfway across its parent (so its left side is on the 50% mark, as you mentioned). transform: translate(-50%, 0); pulls the block half it's own width back along the x-axis (ie. to the left), which will place it right in the center of the parent.

Solution 2:

Here's one way to center a text element in the middle of the container (using a header as an example

CSS:

.header {
     text-align: center;
     top: 50%;
     left: 50%;
     transform: translate(-50%, -50%);
     position: absolute;
}

It centers by a middle anchor point.

Solution 3:

Stumbled upon this question, and I'd like to add another way to center content within a div.

By using the CSS3 display mode 'flexible box', as in setting the following CSS properties to the parent div

display: flex;
position: relative;
align-items: center;
justify-content:center;

And 'at least' setting the following properties to the child div

position:relative;

The browser will automatically center the contents within the parent div, unaffected by their width or height, this particularly comes in handy when you're developing something like an image grid or just want to remove the hassle of calculating a divs position, then having to recalculate it when you change your mind about the set-up of said div.

In my own work, I tend to set-up a class named

.center-center

With the properties I described for the parent div, then just add it to whatever element of which I need its contents centered.

I've created a JSFiddle to support this explanation, feel free to click on the red squares to see the positioning in action.

https://jsfiddle.net/f1Lfqrfs/

For multi-line support, you can add (or uncomment in the JSF) the following CSS property to the parent DIV

flex-wrap: wrap;

Solution 4:

If adding another element is an option, consider the following:

/* CSS for all objects */

div.object {
  width: 100%;
  height: 100%;
  position: absolute;
  left: -50%;
  top: -50%; /* to anchor at the top center point (as opposed to true center) set this to 0 or remove it all together */
}

div.anchor {
  position: absolute; /* (or relative, never static) */
}


/* CSS for specific objects */

div#el1 {
  /* any positioning and dimensioning properties for element 1 should go here */
  left: 100px;
  top: 300px;
  width: 200px;
  height: 200px;
}

div#el2 {
  /* any positioning and dimensioning properties for element 2 should go here */
  left: 400px;
  top: 500px;
  width: 100px;
  height: 100px;
}

div#el1>div.object {
  /* all other properties for element 1 should go here */
  background-color: purple;
}

div#el2>div.object {
  /* all other properties for element 2 should go here */
  background-color: orange;
}
<div class="anchor" id="el1">
  <div class="object">
  </div>
</div>
<div class="anchor" id="el2">
  <div class="object">
  </div>
</div>

Essentially what we're doing is setting up one object to define the position, width and height of the element, and then placing another one inside of it that gets offset by 50%, and gets its parent dimensions (ie width: 100%).