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I like to think I'm a pretty good... well, passable... web developer. I've built probably... IDK, 50 web sites, with a good amount of Flash and Javascript, and a few database-backed applications, and done enough graphic design to be able to competently fake it :)

I've run across this problem half a dozen times in my career: How do you set an inner div to 100% height of the containing div when the container's height is variable? I know you can do it with Javascript or use faux columns, but I swear to dog, if there is no way to do it with pure HTML/CSS I'm going to be very disappointed in life and the W3C :(

Here be the mockup matey: http://random.siliconrockstar.com/heightTest/

See, the inner div #content pushes #container down. I want the pink part, #shadow, to be the same height as #content. The usual case when I run into this problem is with designers who don't know anything about web development and use a lot of drop shadows; just pretend the pink part is a dropshadow I need to extend down the right edge of #content.

Aside: yes, I know you can do dropshadows with CSS now, even in IE with some hacks, but in this case I have design issues preventing me from doing that.

Is this really impossible without Javascript? :(

5 Answers 5

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If IE6 is no topic, you can do:

#shadow{
  position: absolute;
  top: 0;
  bottom: 0;
  right: 0;
  width: 100px;
  background: #F69;
}
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  • You are awesome. Doesn't work in my XP/IE7 VM but I don't care, it works in IE8+ :) Oct 27, 2011 at 22:07
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I think it's impossible without JavaScript but according what you need you can use this kind of stuff: http://matthewjamestaylor.com/blog/equal-height-columns-cross-browser-css-no-hacks

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  • 1
    Um... yeah, this kind of seems like more of a confusing hack than just using javascript. Thanks for replying though, it's a very interesting article. Oct 27, 2011 at 22:06
1

I'm thinking that maybe the new css3 stuff will start to help with this: e.g.

.container { display: box; box-align: stretch; box-orient: vertical; }  
.container div { box-flex: 1; }

(you may need the -moz- and -webkit- prefixes for this)

0

For the pink one

#shadow{
    height: inherit;
}
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  • 1
    Doesn't appear to work, I assume because you can't inherit a height that is not specified. Oct 27, 2011 at 22:07
0

Well. there is a number of ways to do it. Oldest one is to use big bottom padding and big negative bottom margin as as explained there: http://www.alphapapahotel.com/equal-height-div-columns-100-percent/css/

But this way have it's drawbacks: You need to set parent's element overflow to hidden to make it work. So if you inner absolute positioned elements to overflow it, you can't. Also if area inside "overflow: hidden;" div have anchor (<a name="first-paragraph"></a> for example) the area inside the div will be scrolled, not the page.

Another way is to use table-cell property: http://jsfiddle.net/8UPeR/ . Didn't work in older browsers through.

But to just stretch #shadow to the height of the #content there are easier ways, like using pseudo-elemens ( http://jsfiddle.net/PWMsz/1/ ) or "position: absolute" as in topek's example.

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