73

This hadn't hit me until now (and this is not only in webkit browsers). On all texts in like p tags, h1 tags etc... there's an extra space over and below the text.

In chrome I found this:

user agent stylesheet

-webkit-margin-before: 1em;
-webkit-margin-after: 1em;
-webkit-margin-start: 0px;
-webkit-margin-end: 0px;

This makes the alignment wrong in some places. And yes I'm using a reset stylesheet and no padding or margin are added. Pretty much a basic setup. Why is this and how do I solve it?

2
  • 1
    Can you show an example page where -webkit-margin-after (or any of the other properties you listed) is making a difference?
    – thirtydot
    Apr 19, 2011 at 21:38
  • I can't believe I've never come across this in however many years since iPhone came out. Yes this property is still even in iOS15 ten years on. Jul 20, 2021 at 17:18

13 Answers 13

48

You can also directly modify those attributes like so:

-webkit-margin-before:0em;
-webkit-margin-after:0em;

Works for me in Chrome/Safari. Hope that helps!

7
  • 2
    Why the downvotes? The original question was (in part) implying that default settings for these fields were causing issues, which my solution fixed (this has solved similar issues for me in the past). Jun 29, 2014 at 16:15
  • Agreed. Weird that this is being downvoted since it's the only answer that seems to be right. Jul 3, 2014 at 0:08
  • 5
    @JacobEvelyn downvoted because changing margin works on all browsers, while changing -webkit-... only works on webkit (I didn't downvote it, but that's what I think)
    – stenci
    Oct 1, 2014 at 20:26
  • 3
    @JacobEvelyn: Is there a reason why the value of both are "0em" rather than just "0"?
    – Phil
    Aug 3, 2016 at 19:26
  • 1
    @Phil Not that I can remember. 0 should work fine! Aug 3, 2016 at 21:35
41

These -webkit-margin(s) are overwritten by margin: 0; padding: 0;. Do not worry about them.

Extra space? Maybe you've set line-height:?

7
  • 3
    line-height is default and margin and padding is 0. As I said, using a reset stylesheet. Still the same.
    – tbleckert
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:32
  • have you got any between <p>, <h1> etc. ?
    – RobertO
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:42
  • nope nothing. I should add that the padding is everywhere, not only on my page. And I'm aware of this and I know that this is the way it behaves. I just want to know if it's possible to get rid of it :)
    – tbleckert
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:46
  • 7
    @bharal it works for me -- adding p { margin:0; padding:0; } overrides the -webkit-margin values. they're still visible in Chrome's javascript console, but as overridden values.
    – ericsoco
    Sep 29, 2012 at 22:37
  • 6
    Not really a great answer, non zero margin / padding leaves the -webkit-margin's intact, which is not desired in many cases Jun 22, 2014 at 7:59
8

I had the same issue. Displaying correctly in Firefox but not Chrome.

I had a closer look at http://meyerweb.com/eric/tools/css/reset/ and found that I hadn't declared a general line-height for the body tag in my stylesheet. Set it to 1.2 and that recreated the correct layout in both browsers.

5

Just remove the whitespace between tags e.g.

<p id="one"></p>
<p id="two"></p>

becomes:

<p id="one"></p><p id="two"></p>
1
  • 2
    I personally would not do that. Some Developer in the future may use a HTML beautifier/Formatting tool and re-add the whitespace or do it manually. The principle is the same for why ":empty" is problematic.
    – Phil
    Aug 3, 2016 at 19:29
5

I had a same problem. Extra space between menu links. None of the above solutions worked. What worked for me, was negative margin. Just do something like this:

margin: 0 -2px;

NEW EDIT:

This has nothing to do with -webkit-margins. Most likely your problem occurs with inline elements. This happens because you have spaces or line breaks between your inline elements. To fix this, you have many options:

  • remove all spaces and line-breaks between inline elements
  • skip element closing tag - for example </li> (HTML5 does not care)
  • negative margin (as stated above - problems with IE6/7 - who cares, upgrade ;)
  • set font-size: 0; to problematic inline element container (has issues with android and if font-sizing with ems)
  • give up inline and use float (this way you loose text-align:center)

Explained more specifically and examples by CHRIS COYIER

1
  • I had teh same Problem "remove all spaces and line-breaks between inline elements" worked for me! Thanks!
    – Cyrill
    Feb 3, 2015 at 18:04
1

I was having this same problem with my <h3> tag. I tried setting margin:0;, but it didn't work.

I found that I was habitually commenting out lines in my css by using //. I never noticed it because it hadn't caused any problems before. But when I used // in the line before declaring <h3>, it caused the browser to skip the declaration completely. When I traded out // for /**/ I was able to adjust the margin.

Moral of this story: Always use proper commenting syntax!

1

For me, the picture was:

* {margin:0;padding:0;}

Firefox (FF) and Google Chrome both put 0.67em margins regardless. FF showed its default margin, but crossed out, but applied it anyway. GC showed its default margin (-webkit-margin-before...) uncrossed.

I applied

* {margin:0;padding:0; -webkit-margin-before: 0; -webkit-margin-after: 0;}

but to no avail, although GC now showed its default margin crossed.

I found out, that I can apply either

line-height: 0;

or

font-size: 0;

to achieve the desired effect. This makes sense, if one assumes, that the margin is of the .67em - type. If anybody could give an explanation, why browsers make our lives miserable by applying a line-height dependent, non-removable margin, i would be really grateful.

0
0

For me in Chrome it was some 40px padding-start that was causing this. I did the following that worked:

ul {
    -webkit-padding-start: 0em;
}
0
    -webkit-margin-before: 0em;
    -webkit-padding-start: 0;
    -webkit-margin-after: 0em;

This solved it for me when I was having this exact problem.

1
  • fyi: just an update -webkit-margin-before: 0; breaks in ios 9
    – РАВИ
    Oct 2, 2015 at 22:14
0

In your css file add the following.

* {
  -webkit-margin-before: 0em !important;
  -webkit-margin-after: 0em !important;
}

'*' selects all css elements and overrides the webkit-margin.

0

Modern properties

The following properties should be used instead.

margin-block-start: 0;
margin-block-end: 0;

It's very rare to need to use these at all, but the following can be useful to avoid extra space after the last paragraph in a series.

p:last-child
{
   margin-block-end: 0;
}

I also found that even in Chrome you can trigger the 'ghost margin' by setting margin to inherit in some cases.

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/margin-block-start

-1

I had the same problem. Suddenly one out of my three table cells containing data its header was moved down a little bit. My problem was simply solved by adding this:

table td
{
    vertical-align: top;
}

Seems like some other element in a 'higher' style sheet was telling my data to center itself in the cell, instead of just staying on top.

I guess its just stupid, and wasnt really a problem... but the next person to read this topic might have the same stupid error as i did :)

Take care!

-1

If user agent stylesheet is kicking in, it is because the tag property was not properly defined in your css stylesheet.

Chances are that a typo, forgotten bracket or semicolon is breaking up your stylesheet BEFORE reaching the tag property settings your page later refers to or "needs".

Run your CSS thru error checking, like CSS LINT and fix whichever errors are eventually detected.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.