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My problem is HTML and CSS related. I have a hierarchy type structure that I want to display inside a list. The hierarchy contains Countries, States and Cities (it is three levels deep).

I want to display the list inside a select list, each item type (Country, State, City) must be selectable. The items should appear indented as:

United States
- Hawaii
-- Kauai
- Washington
-- Seattle
-- Chelan

The problem is with the indentation. I am trying to use either margin-left or padding-left to indent the tags, which appear correct in FireFox but not in IE7. This is an example of the generated select list:

<select name="Something">
<option style="padding-left: 0">United States</option>
<option style="padding-left: 20px">Hawaii</option>
<option style="padding-left: 40px">Kauai</option>
<option style="padding-left: 20px">Washington</option>
<option style="padding-left: 40px">Seattle</option>
<option style="padding-left: 40px">Chelan</option>
</select>

I want to achieve consistent indentation across browsers without using CSS hacks.

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3 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

deceze way is much better and was my first idea. As an alternative if that doesn't work is that you can use non-breaking spaces in the tag value:

<select>
    <option>select me</option>
    <option>&amp;nbsp;me indented</option>
    <option>&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;even more indentation</option>
</select>

It's far from pretty but it might work for you if the optgroup doesn't.

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ugh, i can't get the entity to work correctly &nbsp; – MacAnthony Jul 18 at 6:00
I'm afraid this is the most reliable solution indeed. – ms2ger Jul 18 at 9:59
I agree too. Non-breaking spaces work, and so do dashes. – Salman A Jul 20 at 5:50
vote up 6 vote down

The rendering of SELECT elements is largely up to the browser, you have very little influence over their presentation. Some browsers obviously allow you more customization than others, IE happens to allow very little (gasp, who'd have thunk ;)). If you need very custom SELECT elements, you'll need to employ JavaScript or re-create something that behaves like a SELECT but is made of a bunch of DIVs and checkboxes or something to that extend.

Having said that, I think what you're looking for are OPTGROUPs:

<select>
  <optgroup label="xxx">
    <option value="xxxx">xxxx</option>
    ....
  </optgroup>
  <optgroup label="yyy">
    ...
  </optgroup>
</select>

Every browser will display them differently, but they'll be displayed in a distinctive fashion in one way or another. Note though that officially in HTML4 you can't nest OPTGROUPs.

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1  
As a fallback you could always display them like you did in the example, indenting them using dashes --. – deceze Jul 18 at 5:53
@deceze Quoted from the question: "each item type (Country, State, City) must be selectable". I doubt optgroup is selectable. – o.k.w Jul 18 at 7:25
True that. Then he needs to either group them differently and use the group label as, well, label, or simply skip the second part of my answer. – deceze Jul 18 at 11:50
Ummm... optgroups cannot be nested i think, I mean, I might use optgroups for country level but then I cannot use them for states. – Salman A Jul 20 at 5:44
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Isn't this method of grouping creating more problems than it solves? As a user, which of those am I supposed to choose? Is there any benefit to choosing something more specific than country?

If the issue is that you only have one database field to store them in, why not have three separate select boxes (making 2 or 3 optional) and just store the most specific?:

<select name="country">
    <option>Choose a country</option>
    <option>United States</option>
</select>
<select name="state">
    <option>Choose a state</option>
    <option>Hawaii</option>
</select>
<select name="city">
    <option>Choose a city</option>
    <option>Kauai</option>
</select>
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I'll have to do a cascaded "onchange=populate_next_select();" for this purpose. Besides, what I want is to present the entire list in one galance. – Salman A Jul 20 at 5:53
@Salman A: Why so? You're fully-populating the one-select box anyway, so why not fully-populate all 3? However, your point about providing the entire list at once is a fair one. – Simon Scarfe Jul 20 at 8:21
>> "Why so?" The client said so :( – Salman A Jul 22 at 10:04

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