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here's the example http://jsfiddle.net/FW38N/1/

how can i make the div (container) with height:auto instead of making it with fixed height

        .container{
        width:auto;
        height:auto;
        background-color:black;
        position:relative;
    }

    .text {
        position:absolute;
        width:50px;
        height:50px;
        background-color:red;
    }

<div class='container'>
        <div class='text'>

        </div></div>
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    I think this is not posible with css only, because "text" is absolute, like in "other dimension", and "container" don't know about its dimensions. Maybe to include some JavaScript to get "text" size, and apply that size (height) to "container". Feb 22, 2013 at 22:25

3 Answers 3

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just write height:100%; it will set up height of div to size of text+ margins

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you could also try

<p class="text">
    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet ...
</p>

and not a div

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I don't believe there's a way to do that without using JavaScript or jQuery.

When an element has position:absolute, it doesn't occupy space inside the parent. It's separate from the layout and flow of the page (like a pop-up window). In the example above, the parent will have a height of zero, because there's nothing in it taking up space. This is a fundamental part of how absolute positioning behaves.

For this reason, it's problematic to use absolute positioning for content that varies in height (except for things like pop-ups and dropdown menus, which aren't part of the main page layout anyways). In effect, every element with absolute positioning is sort of a pop-up.

If the parent had position:absolute instead of the child, then the parent could have height:auto.

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