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I want to set a background for the content of a page. The div with the background image has class=history. All the divs above "history" and history itself have height set to 100%. However, the "history" div does not get the correct height.

Below is a sample of the code. I may be missing some relevant details but will add them once the solution is found. See also the live page.

The CSS:

html, body {
    height: 100%;
    background: url(cream_dust.png) repeat 0 0;
}

The HTML:

<html>
<body class="page page-id-41 page-child parent-pageid-8 page-template-default logged-in admin-bar">
<div class="wrapper-for-footer">
<div id="page" class="hfeed site">
<div id="main" class="site-main">
<div id="primary" class="content-
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  • Can you add some html markup to the question? That way it'll make sense to future visitors even if you've fixed the linked site.
    – Jeroen
    Dec 26, 2012 at 0:30

2 Answers 2

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An element that is set to height: 100% will only take up 100% of the vertical space of its parent. If there's an element somewhere between history and body that doesn't have a height, then it won't be as tall as you're expecting.

The majority of the history element is floated content, so it has collapsed to only contain the non-floated content.

Add a clearfix to the history element.

overflow: hidden

or

.history {
    zoom: 1; // fix for IE
}

.history:after {
    content: ' ';
    display: block;
    height: 0;
    clear: both;
    visibility: hidden;
}
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You might need to add position:absolute; to the div you are trying to give 100% height to.

EDIT: you need to add position:absolute; to the history div

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  • That seems like a half solution. It works but messes everything else up. Why does that work? Dec 26, 2012 at 0:49
  • That's just how divs work. In order to have 100% height you must use absolute positioning. The other errors you are having stem from another root. Let me take a look and see if I spot something.
    – rcorrie
    Dec 26, 2012 at 0:54
  • I found you a solution... remove height:100%; from <body> and then in your CSS, set this: .page-id-41{background:url('http:.your-images..png')!important;}
    – rcorrie
    Dec 26, 2012 at 1:02

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