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I have a couple of elements that are position:absolute;left:200%; on a page. The left:200%; is intended to keep the element out of sight but still allow for the element to appear from the right-hand side with a transition.

The relevant CSS for my body and html elements is as follows:

html, body {
    margin:0;
    padding:0;
    height:100%;
    }
body {
    min-height:100%;
    overflow-x:hidden;
    }

When the page loads, it looks fine. There is no horizontal scroll bar but there is a vertical one. However, when pressing the middle mouse button or pressing the right arrow on the keyboard, I'm still able to scroll to the right, revealing the elements.

I've read that a solution to this is to add overflow-x:hidden; to the html element, but when I do this, some other position:absolute; page elements overlap the vertical scroll bar and begin to act like position:fixed; elements (they don't scroll with the rest of the page but instead stay in the same position with the window).

I've also read that it's possible to use JavaScript to fix the horizontal scrolling problem, but I can't find a good example or full explanation, either on StackOverflow or anywhere else.

How do I fix this, preferably with CSS, but JavaScript if necessary, while keeping all else on the page as is (importantly position:absolute; still acting that way)?

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  • 2
    try to add position relative to your container. you can create a fiddle so that we can help you more or rather paste the link of the website
    – winresh24
    May 16, 2016 at 2:30
  • @winresh24 On adding position:relative; it seems like that works. Thanks!
    – Laef
    May 16, 2016 at 2:35

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