14

I am confused about size of body tag in html.

I have a tough code as follows:

<body>

</body>

 body{
        padding: 0px;
        height: 100px;
        background-color: #e5e5e5;
    }

Why does background cover all of the page?, I thought it should only cover 100px,

Please explain this for me, thank for your help!

5
  • 1
    @seemly: there was an invalid edit to the question, you can see question history, the OP asks why background was in fact applied to the whole page. Jul 23, 2013 at 9:55
  • 1
    @seemly, try and understand the question. He wants to ask why does the Bg-color get applied to the whole page. Frankly speaking, aashnisshah's does not answer the question and it deviates from what answer the OP seek's
    – AnaMaria
    Jul 23, 2013 at 10:02
  • I am sorry, My English is very bad!!!
    – ThiepLV
    Jul 23, 2013 at 10:04
  • 4
    Thats fine. we are programmers, not Shakespeare's
    – AnaMaria
    Jul 23, 2013 at 10:08
  • add margin: 0; style to body, and there you go
    – LorDex
    Jul 23, 2013 at 10:45

4 Answers 4

21

This is indeed confusing, but it is specified in the CSS 2.1 specification, clause 14.2 Background: if the computed value of background-color is transparent and the computed value of background-image is none for the html element (as things are by default), browsers must instead use the computed value of the background properties for the body element and must not render a background for body (i.e. make it transparent). That is, body background magically turns to html background if html lacks a background of its own – and this only affects background properties, not the true height of the body element.

I haven’t seen any rationale for this odd rule, which prescribes a kind of “reverse inheritance”. But it’s clearly specified in CSS 2.1 and applied by browsers.

As explained in other answers, you can make your content have a background of specific height either by setting a background on html (so that body background is really applied to body only) or by using wrapper element inside body and setting height on it (since the special rule applies to body only).

Thanks to Anne van Kesteren who pointed to the CSS spec when I asked about this in the WHATWG mailing list. (I thought I knew CSS 2.1 by heart but really didn’t. ☺)

4
  • 2
    This is the only true answer and explanation of the true reason of the issue. This answer should be the accepted one! Jul 23, 2013 at 18:32
  • 1
    Also, at some point before 2009 this behavior was specified differently for HTML and XHTML documents, and old browsers behaved this way, but then the spec was changed: groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/mozilla.dev.tech.css/… Jul 23, 2013 at 19:26
  • @Jukka Thank you, I read, but I didn't understand what is canvas!, can you explain for me?
    – ThiepLV
    Jul 24, 2013 at 6:47
  • Just revisited this question that I'd marked as a duplicate last year, as well as your answer. This behavior may have to do with the background and bgcolor presentational attributes that are defined on the body element. Also, your use of U+263A WHITE SMILING FACE is a nice respite from the colorful bitmap emoji that is all the rage these days.
    – BoltClock
    Feb 15, 2016 at 17:24
3

The body is a special HTML tag, and ordinarily covers the entire HTML page. Try the following:

<body>
    <div id="content">
        Content goes here
    </div>
</body>

and the CSS to accompany it would be:

body{
    /* whatever body related codes you'd like to use go here */
}

#content{
    padding: 0px;
    height: 100px;
    background-color: #e5e5e5;
}
2
  • 1
    Here the height of the body element is set to 100px, and the question was why its background is still applied to the entire page. Jul 23, 2013 at 10:12
  • 1
    The body element does not ordinarily cover the viewport. The background issue is the special case separately described in the CSS 2.1 spec: w3.org/TR/CSS21/colors.html#background Jul 23, 2013 at 18:28
2

Many web developers do not understand the difference between applying style to the body element versus the html element. Most of the time these authors will apply style only to the body element; when that's not sufficient, they'll spam all sorts of styles on both html and body until the page happens to look correct.

The confusion is understandable. In the beginning, both were treated similarly, with attributes like background-color being applied to the body tag, affecting the whole page.

EDIT: To simplify thing i have added a fiddle to demonstrate how the background-color gets applied.So if you specify the background color for the body and you DONT want it to spread to the whole page you must specify the background-color for HTML too

FIDDLE

CSS

html{
    background-color:yellow;
}
body{
        padding: 0px;
        height: 100px;
        background-color: red;
    }
2
  • 3
    This does not answer the question (why the body background is applied to the whole page). Jul 23, 2013 at 10:10
  • @JukkaK.Korpela, Sometimes trivial things like this are best left unexplained. Now if we start giving explanations for "why is tea best served hot?", we would not make it to the end of the day, would we? Just kidding buddy. Frankly, i dont know. :)
    – AnaMaria
    Jul 23, 2013 at 10:19
1

You should explicitly specify a background color for the html tag (as browsers add it automatically), otherwise, the background of the body is spread all over the document.

3
  • 2
    This doesa not answer the “why” question. Jul 23, 2013 at 10:11
  • Body is treated like html (because it the graphical representation of the document, html contains other stuff: <header>) so unless explicitly setting a css attribute to <html> it will act like the all page
    – YardenST
    Jul 23, 2013 at 10:59
  • 1
    That is what seems to be happening, but what is the explanation or excuse in HTML or CSS specifications? This only happens to the background. E.g., if you set a border on body, it is drawn around the box of the body element. Jul 23, 2013 at 17:22

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