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I have this CSS code with an inline-block. Can anyone tell me how to make it work in Internet Explorer 6 and 7. Any ideas? Maybe I'm doing something wrong? Thank you!

#signup {
   color:#FFF;
   border-bottom:solid 1px #444;
   text-transform:uppercase;
   text-align:center;
}
#signup #left {
   display: inline-block
}
#signup #right {
   background-image:url(images/signup.jpg);
   border-left: solid 1px #000;
   border-right: solid 1px #000;
   display: inline-block; 
   padding:1% 2%
   width:16%;
}
#signup #right a { font-size:100%; font-weight:bold } 
#signup #right p { font-size:90%; font-weight:bold }
#signup a:hover  { color:#FFF; text-decoration:underline }
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1 Answer

up vote 108 down vote accepted

In IE6/IE7, display: inline-block only works on elements that are naturally inline (such as spans).

To make it work on other elements such as divs, you need this:

#yourElement {
    display: inline-block;
    *display: inline;
    zoom: 1;
}

*display: inline uses a "safe" CSS hack to apply to only IE7 and lower.

For IE6/7, zoom: 1 provides hasLayout. Having "layout" is a prerequisite for display: inline-block to always work.

It is possible to apply this workaround while keeping valid CSS, but it's not really worth thinking about, particularly if you're already using any vendor prefixed properties.

Read this for more information about display: inline-block (but forget about -moz-inline-stack, that was only required for the now ancient Firefox 2).

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I've read (but cannot test) that you should set _height: ###px as well, which is only understood by IE6 and below. Assuming you still care about a browser that is officially dead, that is. – Blazemonger Aug 30 '12 at 15:13
Sometimes it requires display: inline\9; to work in IE8. – Somebody Oct 2 '12 at 16:21

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