10

I have a container div and two nested divs within. I do not have control over the content of either of these nested divs.

What I essentially need is to make the two nested divs always have the same height. I figured this can be achieved by giving the container div height:auto so that it would stretch its own height to the tallest of the two nested divs (each of which stretches to fit its own content), and then the other nested div would stretch to 100% of the container's height.

Here's what I tried:

Style:

#container{
  background-color:#FF0;
  overflow:auto;
}

#left{
  float:left;
  height:100%;
  width:20%;
  background-color:#F00;
}

#right{
  height:100%;
  width:60%;
  background-color:#0F3;
}

HTML:

<div id="container">

 <div id="left">
  <p>Content</p>
  <p>Content</p>
  <p>Content</p>
 </div>

 <div id="right">
  <p>Content</p>
  <p>Content</p>
 </div>

</div>

But this does not work. The container stretches to fit the longest div ("left" in this case) but the shorter nested div ("right") does not stretch itself.

Note, however, that this DOES work if I give the container a specific height:

#container{
  background-color:#FF0;
  overflow:auto;
  height:300px;
}

Is there any way I can get this to work without resorting to tables?

2 Answers 2

1

The two most common ways to do this are Faux Columns using images or setting the heights to equal values with JavaScript. I did a screencast to demonstrate the second technique, Equalizing Column Heights with jQuery. The technique could be easily adapted for other libraries or for plain JavaScript.

1

The Important Note is that Percent Value for Height Deprecated a while ago. So you have to use another pattern.

Most of the time (specially in your case) the panels height are sets automatically. So it is better to increase the height with a little javascript

<script>
    function IncreaseHeight()
    {
        var first = Document.getElementById("Right").style.height;
        var second = Document.getElementById("Left").style.height;

        if(first < second)
        Document.getElementById("Right").style.height = Document.getElementById("Left").style.height;
        else
        Document.getElementById("Left").style.height = Document.getElementById("Right").style.height;
    }
</script>

note that change the place of Right and Left base onyour case.

4
  • If he needs both columns to be equal (depending on the height of the largest), it might be worth turning it into a function to find which is the tallest of the two divs, then assigning that height to the smaller. Mar 6, 2010 at 9:21
  • 1
    @ricebowl - I had update the script to work in your senario. check it. Mar 6, 2010 at 9:48
  • Hajloo, +1 for the revision and function =) Mar 6, 2010 at 10:03
  • I would use this, but I would pass two variables, i.e. IncreaseHeight(id1, id2) and change the Document.getElementById("Right") to Document.getElementById(id1) and "left" to id2 this way you can pass multiple columns. then call increaseHeight with the divs you need to compare. You may have to append some string tags because I'm not sure you could pass variables like that using Document.getElementById Jan 30, 2012 at 10:52

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