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1

I want to display

Name [Textbox]

Age: [Textbox]

BlahBlahCatfish: [Textbox]

but if I simply plonk the code in, it gets lined up exactly as its lined up above.

What I want is for it to be lined up like this:

Name:            [Textbox]
Age:             [Textbox]
BlahBlahCatfish: [Textbox]

Ordinarly I would use a Table but I am trying to get out of that habit and use lovely CSS. Ideas of how to do this without billions of divs and stuff?

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76% accept rate
For more complicated forms than this, especially in liquid layouts, you will generally still need to use tables. Don't worry too much about it. – bobince Oct 30 at 14:37

4 Answers

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Here is a site I did that does that.

http://acm.cs.kent.edu/contact/form.php

Basically its like this

<p>
    <label for="someTextBox" >Text</label>
    <input type="text" id="someTextBox" />
</p>

p label {
    display: inline-block;
    width: x;
}
p input {
    width: y;
}
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This is good: it preserves the semantics by introducing new tags. Although using a class selector instead of the p would increase flexibility. – xtofl Oct 30 at 12:35
Fantastic. It never occured to me to use a <label>! Much appreciated. – SLC Oct 30 at 12:38
1  
Labels are best when used with the for attribute. It makes them clickable and gives the focus to the input field! – Daniel A. White Oct 30 at 12:39
display: inline-block doesn't work in IE 6, though, iirc. – Johannes Rössel Oct 30 at 12:53
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use a "left" and a "right" class, and make them float:left and float:right, respectively. The text would then go in a <div class="right">, and the attribute name in a <div class="left">.

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I use the 960 Grid System to handle form based layout, in particular I found the Fluid 960 Grid System most useful.

It's a simple and structured approach to layout, worth investing a little time to learn this as it will save you so much time in the future.

Another handy tool is the Gridder bookmarklet to aide layout.

There are other CSS frameworks such as Blueprint which are equally as good.

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I have a couple of sources I use all the time:

http://jeffhowden.com/code/css/forms/ http://www.webdesignermag.co.uk/tutorials/make-your-forms-beautiful-with-css/ http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2006/11/11/css-based-forms-modern-solutions/ http://www.webcredible.co.uk/user-friendly-resources/css/css-forms.shtml

Here's the one I go to the most:

http://nidahas.com/2006/12/06/forms-markup-and-css-revisited/

Your forms will look awesome, and blend right into the rest of your site design!

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Thanks! Very useful stuff, much appreciated. – SLC Nov 2 at 13:52

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