Why certain DOCTYPE declarations cause 100%-height tables and divs to stop working?
It seems to me that some DOCTYPE
declarations in IE (6-8) may cause the browser to ignore height="100%"
on tables and divs (style="height:100%"
)
E.g
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<title>Test1</title>
</head>
<body>
<div style="border: 2px solid red; height: 100%">
Hello World
</div>
</body>
</html>
Will render the DIV
with the height of the text, it will not stretch. Removing the DOCTYPE
declaration causes the DIV
to stretch vertically as desired.
So my questions are:
- Why does it happen?
- How do you keep the
DOCTYPE
and still allow tables to stretch? - Does / did it happen to you?
- Did you know about it?, is it well known?
Solution 1:
Because ancient browsers had odd, inconsistent behavior and browsers treat Doctypes like an intelligence test to see if the author is writing code to the standards or to what they learned from W3Schools a decade ago. If you have
height: 100%
and the height of the parent element isauto
then100%
meansauto
.Generally, you don't. It screams "layout table". That said, set heights or minimum heights on the html and body elements. There are other techniques, but I don't have a handy link at the moment as, oddly, I've never been in a position where I needed the technique.
It is what browsers are supposed to do, so …
Well, I am answering this question …
Solution 2:
A real solution to this "problem" would be using the following CSS:
html, body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
border: none;
height: 100%;
}
#mydiv {
height: 100%;
}
However remember that a border adds height.
Solution 3:
When you remove the doctype the browser goes into quirks mode which does things differently to help older code that is not validated to render correctly.
You have to set the height on the container element so the div with 100% height doesn't inherit height: auto;
You could try a switching from transitional to strict but I doubt this will fix your issue.