How to make CSS width to fill parent?
I am sure this problem has been asked before but I cannot seem to find the answer.
I have the following markup:
<div id="foo">
<div id="bar">
here be dragons
</div>
</div>
My desire is to make foo to have width of 600px
(width: 600px;
) and to make bar have the following behaviors:
padding-left: 2px;
padding-right: 2px;
margin-left: 2px;
margin-right: 2px;
outerWidth: 100%;
In other words instead of setting width of bar to 592px
I would like to set the outer width of bar to 100%
so that it is computed to 592px
. The importance here is that I can change foo's width to 800px
and bar will calculate when rendered instead of me having to do the math for all these instances manually.
Is this possible in pure CSS?
Some more fun with it:
- What if
#bar
is a table? - What if
#bar
is a textarea? What if
#bar
is an input?What if
#foo
is a table cell (td
)? (Does this change the problem or is the problem identical?)
So far the table#bar
, input#bar
has been discussed. I have not seen a good solution for textarea#bar. I Think a textarea with no border/margin/padding with a div
wrap might work with the div
styled to work as borders for the textarea
.
Solution 1:
EDIT:
Those three different elements all have different rendering rules.
So for:
table#bar
you need to set the width to 100% otherwise it will be only be as wide as it determines it needs to be. However, if the table rows total width is greater than the width of bar
it will expand to its needed width. IF i recall you can counteract this by setting display: block !important;
though its been awhile since ive had to fix that. (im sure someone will correct me if im wrong).
textarea#bar
i beleive is a block level element so it will follow the rules the same as the div. The only caveat here is that textarea
take an attributes of cols
and rows
which are measured in character columns. If this is specified on the element it will override the width specified by the css.
input#bar
is an inline element, so by default you cant assign it width. However the similar to textarea
's cols
attribute, it has a size
attribute on the element that can determine width. That said, you can always specifiy a width by using display: block;
in your css for it. Then it will follow the same rendering rules as the div.
td#foo
will be rendered as a table-cell
which has some craziness to it. Bottom line here is that for your purposes its going to act just like div#foo
as far as restricting the width of its contents. The only issue here is going to be potential unwrappable text in the column somewhere which would make it ignore your width setting. Also all cells in the column are going to get the width of the widest cell.
Thats the default behavior of block level element - ie. if width is auto
(the default) then it will be 100% of the inner width of the containing element. so in essence:
#foo {width: 800px;}
#bar {padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px; margin-left: 2px; margin-right: 2px;}
will give you exactly what you want.
Solution 2:
almost there, just change outerWidth: 100%;
to width: auto;
(outerWidth is not a CSS property)
alternatively, apply the following styles to bar:
width: auto;
display: block;
Solution 3:
Use the styles
left: 0px;
or/and
right: 0px;
or/and
top: 0px;
or/and
bottom: 0px;
I think for most cases that will do the job
Solution 4:
So after research the following is discovered:
For a div#bar
setting display:block; width: auto;
causes the equivalent of outerWidth:100%;
For a table#bar
you need to wrap it in a div with the rules stated below. So your structure becomes:
<div id="foo">
<div id="barWrap" style="border....">
<table id="bar" style="width: 100%; border: 0; padding: 0; margin: 0;">
This way the table takes up the parent div 100%, and #barWrap
is used to add borders/margin/padding to the #bar
table. Note that you will need to set the background of the whole thing in #barWrap
and have #bar
's background be transparent or the same as #barWrap
.
For textarea#bar
and input#bar
you need to do the same thing as table#bar
, the down side is that by removing the borders you stop native widget rendering of the input/textarea and the #barWrap
's borders will look a bit different than everything else, so you will probably have to style all your inputs this way.