You haven't given it a top:
value - so it's placing itself where it was if it was relatively positioned/default place (As BoltClock has said, this is known as the static position
).
For the purposes of this section and the next, the term "static
position" (of an element) refers, roughly, to the position an element
would have had in the normal flow.
More precisely, the static position
for 'top' is the distance from the top edge of the containing block to
the top margin edge of a hypothetical box that would have been the
first box of the element if its specified 'position' value had been
'static' and its specified 'float' had been 'none' and its specified
'clear' had been 'none'.
~W3 Spec
Here is a basic example:
html,
body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
.box {
position: relative;
width: 200px;
height: 200px;
}
#box_1 {
background: #ee3e64;
}
#box_2 {
background: #44accf;
left: 200px;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
}
#box_3 {
background: #b7d84b;
}
<div id="box_1" class="box"></div>
<div id="box_2" class="box"></div>
<div id="box_3" class="box"></div>
As you can see, this would also be able to do this using the display:inline-block
property (since you're removing the defaulted 'block' styling that take's up 100% of the width), which you then wouldn't need to worry about the absolute at all:
html,
body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
.box {
position: relative;
width: 200px;
height: 200px;
display: inline-block;
}
#box_1 {
background: #ee3e64;
}
#box_2 {
background: #44accf;
}
#box_3 {
background: #b7d84b;
}
<div id="box_1" class="box"></div>
<div id="box_2" class="box"></div>
<div id="box_3" class="box"></div>
If, however, you needed it to only have two squares wide, you might want to wrap it in a container div width and set a width:
html,
body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
.box {
position: relative;
width: 200px;
height: 200px;
display: inline-block;
}
#box_1 {
background: #ee3e64;
}
#box_2 {
background: #44accf;
}
#box_3 {
background: #b7d84b;
}
.container{
width:500px;
}
<div class="container">
<div id="box_1" class="box"></div>
<div id="box_2" class="box"></div>
<div id="box_3" class="box"></div>
</div>
So, you were right to think that the absolutely positioned element is aligning to the next available parent with position:relative
(which, just so happens to be the body, since you haven't declared one), you have just missed the use of top
to position it where you want vertically, and so is defaulting to where 'it would be otherwise' - which is the baseline (which is at the bottom by default in divs)
#box_4 { background: #ff0000; position:absolute; }
You'll see it will sit below your relative box (#3). If top isn't set, it tries to use it's previous non-absolute sibling's context to determine positioning.