CSS: How do you align text vertically within a div?
May 23, 2004 2:01 AM Subscribe
A CSS question: How do you align text vertically within a div?
but nicwolff,
that
text
is
not
aligned
vertically.
o
h
,
w
e
l
l
.
.
.
posted by quonsar at 4:01 AM on May 23, 2004
that
text
is
not
aligned
vertically.
o
h
,
w
e
l
l
.
.
.
posted by quonsar at 4:01 AM on May 23, 2004
You don't.
CSS3, which we may see supported sometime around 2027, offers the glyph-orientation-vertical which may be close to what you want, the catch is it doesn't work in any current browsers. There is also an IE specific filter. For now you will have to make an image or resort to the quonsar method and introduce line breaks.
posted by cedar at 5:33 AM on May 23, 2004
CSS3, which we may see supported sometime around 2027, offers the glyph-orientation-vertical which may be close to what you want, the catch is it doesn't work in any current browsers. There is also an IE specific filter. For now you will have to make an image or resort to the quonsar method and introduce line breaks.
posted by cedar at 5:33 AM on May 23, 2004
I assumed that Gyan simply wanted to center content vertically within a div - rereading the question, I think that's the case.
Anyhow, I was all set to write in with an explanation of how CSS 2 doesn't really allow for this, but nicwolff beat me to the punch . . . with a workaround! I didn't know about that table-cell trick. Thanks!
How does it hold up across browsers and platforms?
posted by aladfar at 11:11 AM on May 23, 2004
Anyhow, I was all set to write in with an explanation of how CSS 2 doesn't really allow for this, but nicwolff beat me to the punch . . . with a workaround! I didn't know about that table-cell trick. Thanks!
How does it hold up across browsers and platforms?
posted by aladfar at 11:11 AM on May 23, 2004
I can't get the display table-cell thing to work at all in IE. I tend to use this code:
<div style="height: 20%;">
<table style="height: 100%;"><td>
text here
</td></table>
</div>
Note that the div's height has to be set, because the table's height of 100% is relative to the height of the div.
Oh, and pre-emptively: just because you're using CSS doesn't mean you can't use a table occasionally -- I've never understood the modern all-out War on Tables myself. They're useful for some things. I mean, with just one table, you can vertically centre an entire page, if you want:
<table style="height: 100%;"><td>
other page text and code here
</td></table>
They're also useful for making username/password boxes line up properly, amongst other things.
posted by reklaw at 12:30 PM on May 23, 2004
<div style="height: 20%;">
<table style="height: 100%;"><td>
text here
</td></table>
</div>
Note that the div's height has to be set, because the table's height of 100% is relative to the height of the div.
Oh, and pre-emptively: just because you're using CSS doesn't mean you can't use a table occasionally -- I've never understood the modern all-out War on Tables myself. They're useful for some things. I mean, with just one table, you can vertically centre an entire page, if you want:
<table style="height: 100%;"><td>
other page text and code here
</td></table>
They're also useful for making username/password boxes line up properly, amongst other things.
posted by reklaw at 12:30 PM on May 23, 2004
Best answer: How does it hold up across browsers and platforms?
Like most CSS, pretty well except in IE which was written by trained otters. (They're mediocre programmers, but, give them a break, they're otters.) The other vertical-centering trick is
top: 50%; height: 100px; margin-top: -50px;
but it requires that you specify the height of the div in pixels. There's been a lot of work done on refining that solution, and on others.
And like reklaw says, don't kill yourself trying to avoid tables; there are still things you can't do with CSS alone.
posted by nicwolff at 2:04 PM on May 23, 2004
Like most CSS, pretty well except in IE which was written by trained otters. (They're mediocre programmers, but, give them a break, they're otters.) The other vertical-centering trick is
top: 50%; height: 100px; margin-top: -50px;
but it requires that you specify the height of the div in pixels. There's been a lot of work done on refining that solution, and on others.
And like reklaw says, don't kill yourself trying to avoid tables; there are still things you can't do with CSS alone.
posted by nicwolff at 2:04 PM on May 23, 2004
Response by poster: Thanks for all your help. I can't get it to work, though.
I've prepared an image to showcase how I want it to look.
Layout (JPEG, 40KB).
I want to position the 'Lens' and the links in the top-right banner, the same as in the image.
posted by Gyan at 4:36 PM on May 23, 2004
I've prepared an image to showcase how I want it to look.
Layout (JPEG, 40KB).
I want to position the 'Lens' and the links in the top-right banner, the same as in the image.
posted by Gyan at 4:36 PM on May 23, 2004
Response by poster: Oops, you might have to cut-n-paste the link directly in your address bar.
posted by Gyan at 4:37 PM on May 23, 2004
posted by Gyan at 4:37 PM on May 23, 2004
This thread is closed to new comments.
posted by planetkyoto at 2:20 AM on May 23, 2004