6

Say I have several inline-block div tags, like this

<div class="image">

</div>
<div class="image">

</div>

class image just sets their size to 100x100 and a gray background color. Their margin and borders are set to 0, and yet there is spacing between the two rectangles.

If I write the HTML such as this, however:

<div class="image">

</div><div class="image">

</div>

Removing all whitespace between the divs, the spacing disappears.

Since I don't want to write my HTML like that, I'm thinking that there must be a way to remove whitespace using CSS. I don't care if the whitespace is removed, hidden or downsized as long as it's visibility is removed.

Thanks for any help


As requested, JSFiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/6h3Jx/


Updated with word-spacing: http://jsfiddle.net/6h3Jx/1/

4
  • This is weird, do you have a live example? Also, which browser are you testing in?
    – Kyle
    Jan 18, 2011 at 9:10
  • it shouldn't happen the way you said...can you make a jsfiddle example
    – kobe
    Jan 18, 2011 at 9:18
  • Updated question with JSFiddle link
    – Hubro
    Jan 18, 2011 at 9:44
  • @josh-crozier Excuse me, but how is this the duplicate when this question is two years older?
    – Hubro
    Sep 2, 2014 at 11:38

3 Answers 3

1

it is an inline element behaviour, so try floating left. http://jsfiddle.net/aVrSx/

3
  • I can't both float left and center an element. At least I haven't figured out how - any ideas?
    – Hubro
    Jan 18, 2011 at 10:41
  • you want these elements centered in a container?
    – kuyabiye
    Jan 18, 2011 at 12:09
  • I want them to be centered, and break to the next line if the elements exceed the width of the container. A perfect task for inline-block :)
    – Hubro
    Jan 18, 2011 at 12:12
1

you can set "display: flex;" attribute to their parent wrapper:

.flexbox {
  display: -webkit-box;      /* OLD - iOS 6-, Safari 3.1-6 */
  display: -moz-box;         /* OLD - Firefox 19- (buggy but mostly works) */
  display: -ms-flexbox;      /* TWEENER - IE 10 */
  display: -webkit-flex;     /* NEW - Chrome */
  display: flex;             /* NEW, Spec - Opera 12.1, Firefox 20+ */
}
0

put the following on a parent element:

word-spacing:-4px;

Or try:

font-size:0px;

It might work even better as it will not be affected by text resizing.

4
  • That did absolutely nothing :-)
    – Hubro
    Jan 18, 2011 at 9:43
  • yes, i forgot that word-spacing:0; is the default value. -4px should do the trick. However this will be affected by text resizing, so i've added a second solution to my answer.
    – Ivan
    Jan 18, 2011 at 10:07
  • Is there also a value that would hinder font-size:0px; from being inherited down the hierarchy? EDIT: No matter, the font-size solution doesn't work: jsfiddle.net/6h3Jx/1
    – Hubro
    Jan 18, 2011 at 10:23
  • nope, the only solution would be something like .nowhitespace{font-size:0px;} nowhitespace > * { font-size:12px;}
    – Ivan
    Jan 18, 2011 at 10:28

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