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So I've tried to work with the pure-CSS, never-use-tables-for-layout gospel, I really have. But after an incredible amount of pain and anguish, I'm just about ready to give up. I'm willing to go to some effort to accomplish things in CSS, don't get me wrong. But when it seems like some of the most asininely simple things that can be done with layout tables are utterly impossible in CSS, my give-a-damn about conceptual purity really starts to take a beating.

Now, it probably seems like I'm angry, and I am; I'm angry about my wasted time, I'm angry about people coming out of QuarkXpress backgrounds handing me useless fixed-width designs, I'm angry about the failed promise of CSS. But I'm not trying to start an argument; I really do want to know the answer to one simple question that will determine whether I give the pure-CSS thing another try or lump it and use layout tables whenever I damned well feel like it. Because I'd hate to go back to layout tables thinking that this thing is impossible if it's actually not.

The question is this: is there any way using pure-CSS layout to have a column on the left, which is fixed-width, and to the right of it place a data table, and have the data table neatly take up the remainder of whatever space is available? That is, the same layout which is easily achievable by having a two-cell layout table with width 100% and a fixed width on the left cell?

Thank you.

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giveupandusetables.com ;) – alxp Jan 22 at 4:26
Similar to a question of mine: stackoverflow.com/questions/551180/… – finnw Apr 14 at 22:41

10 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check
<div style="width: 200px;background-color: #FFFFCC; float: left;">
Left column
</div>

<div style="margin-left: 200px; background-color: #CCFFFF">
Right column
</div>

That should do it (obviously implementation will vary based on where it is in the page, but I think that's the concept you're looking for).

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Ahh, beautiful. Between Scott Muc's link and this, every occasion seems to be covered. – chaos Jan 22 at 16:01
Very interesting - I'd have guessed that the margin-left of the second div wouldn't be needed because it is the next div in order. Maybe that is what I was missing as well...gotta go try that! – Mark Brittingham Jan 22 at 16:49
Yeah, the margin-left is the missing link for me. What I basically needed was a way of saying "width: 100%-200px". Apparently, margin-left is how you say that. Sort of. – chaos Jan 22 at 17:21
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Just remember that floats can become tough to manage when a page gets complex. There's nothing wrong with using tables for page layout, btw. – CLaRGe Apr 14 at 22:32
vote up 6 vote down

Is this what you're looking for?

I feel your pain, but try not to look at it as time wasted. I'm sure you have a much better grasp of CSS than you previously did. Keep working with it and you'll start seeing the advantages. I personally have found CSS to be one of those things that takes a lot of practice to become proficient in. I've been using CSS based layouts for 5 years and I still learning interesting tricks everyday.

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Yes, it is. Thank you. :) Don't get me wrong, I'm not anti-CSS, and I was a much earlier adopter of it than many people I work with. I see the advantages. Just need to get used to occasionally having to do radically unintuitive things to get results, like in your link. :) – chaos Jan 22 at 15:27
And man, even this has issues. Semantic ones, to be precise; it requires the content column to come before the left column in the markup, so it's out of order for screen readers. – chaos Jan 22 at 15:33
But this is a flaw in CSS. The fact that it's possible to learn to master it given enough time doesn't change that. Compare with learning GridBagLayout in Java (probably less than half a day) – finnw Apr 14 at 22:44
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First, I'd recommend Eric Meyer's CSS books as well as the CSS reference on the web: A List Apart. I use CSS extensively in my work and I think that I have gotten pretty good with it.

With all of that being said: do what works. I have been through exactly the pain that you've just experienced. In the end, I figured that it wasn't worth compromising my design just to be able to say that I hadn't used tables.

Remember: you aren't paid to do CSS - you are paid to write working software.

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+1 for pragmatism. – paxdiablo Jan 22 at 5:56
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I think this is what you're looking for:

<table style='width: 100%;'>
  <tr>
    <td style='width: 200px;'></td>
    <td></td>
  </tr>
</table>

Thank me later. =P

(I'm obviously joking.... kind of...)

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+1 for being a smart *ss - oops, I mean realizing that you should do what works first, then think about purity of code. There's no point making your code CSS-beautiful if you miss deliverable dates. – paxdiablo Jan 22 at 5:58
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Something like this:

<div style="position: relative; width: 100%">
    <div style="position: absolute; left: 0; top: 0; width: 200px">
        left column
    </div>
    <div style="position: absolute; left: 200px; top: 0">
         other stuff
    </div>
</div>

Of course, you should probably put the styles in a separate stylesheet rather than inline. And a single fixed-width column on the left is fairly simple, but occasionally I do see other layouts which can be done easily with tables but are, as far as I know, fiendishly difficult with CSS.

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Nope. Right column gets minimum possible width, which data table inherits. Setting right column width to 100% gives it the entire width of the display area. No good. – chaos Jan 22 at 15:29
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I love how CSS still takes a full page of code to duplicate a couple lines of using a table.

After fighting the CSS war, I've come to the conclusion that "pure" is in the eye of the beholder and have moved to more of a "let's just use what works" approach.

Use CSS on what it's good for: making things look pretty. Use DIV's and SPAN's when you can. But if you find yourself spending a day trying to get things to line up right across all the different browser flavors, then slap a table in there and move on. Don't worry, contrary to what most people seem to think, a puppy will in fact not die.

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In fact, if I'd wasted a day trying to get CSS working, I'd probably go out and kill a puppy, then revert to tables. So I'd suggest sticking with what you're comfortable with and saving the puppy that way. – paxdiablo Jan 22 at 6:00
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You might want to try these:

http://www.alistapart.com/stories/practicalcss/

http://www.w3.org/2002/03/csslayout-howto

Heres why:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tableless_web_design

http://davespicks.com/essays/notables.html

More How TOs:

div.row { clear: both; padding-top: 10px; }

div.row span.label { float: left; width: 100px; text-align: right; }

div.row span.formw { float: right; width: 335px; text-align: left; }

<div style="width: 350px; background-color: #cc9;
border: 1px dotted #333; padding: 5px;
margin: 0px auto";>
  <form>
    <div class="row">
      <span class="label">Name:</span><span
class="formw"><input type="text" size="25" /></span>
    </div>
    <div class="row">
      <span class="label">Age:</span><span
    class="formw"><input type="text" size="25" /></span>
    </div>
    <div class="row">
      <span class="label">Shoe size:</span><span
class="formw"><input type="text" size="25" /></span>
    </div>
    <div class="row">
      <span class="label">Comments:</span><span
class="formw">
        <textarea cols="25" rows="8">
        Go ahead - write something...
        </textarea>
      </span>
    </div>
  <div class="spacer">
  &nbsp;
  </div>
 </form>

</div>
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vote up 1 vote down

Take a look at the Yahoo User Interface Library (YUI). They have solved most of the page layout problems out there with a cross-browser library based on CSS. And they not religious about tables verses divs.

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There is almost certainly an answer that involves applying display:table and display:table-cell to the elements in question. Which is to say... no.

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vote up 0 vote down

As Sparr says, there's css that specifically meets this requirement, because it's not really possible to do it any other way without various, possibly unacceptible compromises, and that's display:table, display:table-cell etc.

Unfortunately IE prior to IE8 doesn't support these display modes, so the problem is not really with css but with a failure of browsers (actually IE, the others are fine) to support css adequately.

The good news is that this is changing, and in due course, we will have a proper css solution. In the meantime, pick one of the compromises in the other answers.

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