Showing posts with label CSS Box Model. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CSS Box Model. Show all posts

Saturday, August 18, 2012

CSS Box Model


The CSS Box Model

All HTML elements can be considered as boxes. In CSS, the term "box model" is used when talking about design and layout.

The CSS box model is essentially a box that wraps around HTML elements, and it consists of: margins, borders, padding, and the actual content.

The box model allows us to place a border around elements and space elements in relation to other elements.

The image below illustrates the box model:

CSS box-model

Explanation of the different parts:
  • Margin - Clears an area around the border. The margin does not have a background color, it is completely transparent
  • Border - A border that goes around the padding and content. The border is affected by the background color of the box
  • Padding - Clears an area around the content. The padding is affected by the background color of the box
  • Content - The content of the box, where text and images appear
In order to set the width and height of an element correctly in all browsers, you need to know how the box model works.

Width and Height of an Element

Remark Important: When you set the width and height properties of an element with CSS, you just set the width and height of the content area. To calculate the full size of an element, you must also add the padding, borders and margins.

The total width of the element in the example below is 300px:

width:250px;
padding:10px;
border:5px solid gray;
margin:10px;

Let's do the math:
250px (width)
+ 20px (left and right padding)
+ 10px (left and right border)
+ 20px (left and right margin)
= 300px

Assume that you had only 250px of space. Let's make an element with a total width of 250px:

Example

width:220px;
padding:10px;
border:5px solid gray;
margin:0px;

Try it yourself »

The total width of an element should be calculated like this:

Total element width = width + left padding + right padding + left border + right border + left margin + right margin

The total height of an element should be calculated like this:

Total element height = height + top padding + bottom padding + top border + bottom border + top margin + bottom margin

Browsers Compatibility Issue

The example above does not display properly in IE8 and earlier versions.
IE8 and earlier versions includes padding and border in the width, if a DOCTYPE is NOT declared.

To fix this problem, just add a DOCTYPE to the HTML page:

Example

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<style type="text/css">
div.ex
{
width:220px;
padding:10px;
border:5px solid gray;
margin:0px;
}
</style>
</head>

Try it yourself »