vote up 3 vote down star

Hey All,

I'm trying to create a dynamic popup window that is able to be re-sized. However, since I'm not able to use static widths, I'm running into issues with using floats and percentages for the widths.

When I specify a percentage for the width of a floating div, it assumes I mean the 100% of the width of the containing div. What I'm trying to do, is set the width to the remainder of the width in the current div. If I use a table, it will work. So essentially, I need to be able to take the following code for a table and make it work using a div...

<table style="width: 100px;" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0">
   <tr style="height: 25px;">
      <td style="width: 10px; background-color: Red;"></td>
      <td style="background-color: Blue;"></td>
      <td style="width: 10px; background-color: Black;"></td>
   </tr>
</table>

Shows the following:


I have the following so far, but it does not work as intended...

<div id="container" style="width: 100px; height: 25px;">
   <div id="left" style="float: left; width: 10px; background-color: Red; height: 100%;"></div>
   <div id="mid" style="float: left; background-color: Blue; height: 100%;"></div>
   <div id="right" style="float: right; width: 10px; background-color: Black; height: 100%;"></div>
</div>

Code above shows the following:


Anyway, if someone could help me translate the table method into something that will work with a div, I would grately appreciate it.

Thanks,
C



Note:

I tried adding the code into the actual post, but it appears that the post is not interpreting the html. Therefore the sections where it says "shows the following", don't actually do that.

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3 Answers

vote up 3 vote down check

You could try something like this:

<div style="width:100px;height:25px;position:relative">
  <div style="width:20px;height:100%;position:absolute;background:red">&nbsp;</div>
  <div style="width:20px;height:100%;position:absolute;right:0;background:black">&nbsp;</div>
  <div style="height:100%;background:blue;padding:0 20px">
    Stuff
  </div>
</div>
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vote up 5 vote down

By default divs are block level elements so you don't need to specify "display: block;".

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vote up 0 vote down

You can accomplish the task with floats and no absolute positioning.

<div id="container" style="display: block; width: 700px; height: 100px;">
    <div id="left" style="display: block; float: left; width: 10px; background-color: Red; height: 100%;">Div 1</div>
    <div id="mid" style="display: block; width: 90%; float: left; background-color: Blue; height: 100%;">Div 2</div>
    <div id="right" style="display: block; float: left; width: 10px; background-color: Green; height: 100%;">Div 3</div>
</div>

What you were missing is the display: block tag which makes div's act like block level elements which will float how you specified. Also, since you can't take up 100% of the parent block, I used 90% and it produced working results under Firefox not sure about IE or Opera.

The preview shows the Div 1, Div 2, Div 3 but when posted it did not

Edit: added working code.

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Although your solution works, it works not because of the block portion, but because you set all your div's widths to 33%. This isn't really feasible for me since i need the right and left pieces to be 10px in order to fit the background image. – regex Jan 30 at 1:19
Aren't divs always blocks by default? I'm pretty sure they are. – dylanfm Jan 30 at 1:21
@dylanfm they might be... – dr.manhattan Jan 30 at 1:31
@regex1 I see, I misunderstood the question I'm rewriting the CSS now – dr.manhattan Jan 30 at 1:32
display: block; is not needed, as DIV-elements are block-level elements by default. An element also becomes block-level when floated. – Arve Systad Jan 30 at 2:02

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