IE display: table-cell child ignores height: 100%
Solution 1:
Unfortunately, the effect of percentage values for height
on display: table-row
and display: table-cell
elements is undefined according to the spec:
CSS 2.1 does not define how the height of table cells and table rows is calculated when their height is specified using percentage values.
So while a browser may claim to offer full support for table layout, certain aspects such as percentage heights may not be consistently implemented across all browsers because there is no correct behavior. You could try raising an issue on Microsoft Connect in hopes that they will change the behavior to be interoperable, but in the meantime you will need to find a different workaround (and even then you can't guarantee the behavior will remain interoperable, even in other browsers).
To make matters worse, I just tested and this affects all versions of IE up to and including 11, which means an IE-specific hack will fall short here. If you need to use a CSS table layout, as evidenced by the fact that you need to support IE8, then a pure CSS workaround is probably not feasible.
Solution 2:
For Internet Explorer 8-10 table-cells
with height: 100%;
have to be wrapped by table-row
with height: 100%;
.
Html for IE should be like:
table > table-row > table-cell
While other browsers will work properly with
table > table-row
or
table > table-cell
[edit] I reviewed the question again, and noticed You want to set 100% height not to the table-cells, but on the content inside it.
solution 1: So for Internet Explorer content-height is related to closest element with height set in absolute units, such as pixels, em's, if you want to use % height, you may also need to set 100% height on all parent elements, this will be html and body. working example
solution 2: Simply add
.content {
padding-bottom: 9999px;
margin-bottom: -9999px;
}
.elem {
overflow: hidden;
}
You don't need to set height on Any of the parent elements in this case. working example.
Hope this helps.