I have a server-side component that generates a fluid layout "toolbar" using DIV without fixed width, generating many A inside it.

Then I need customize that layout to make all A tags auto fit to the parent width. But the number of children is variable and the parent's width isn't known (it auto fits itself to the window).

I made some tests with this Fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/ErickPetru/6nSEj/1/

But I can't find a way to make it dynamic (uncomment the last A tag to see how it ins't working, lol).

I can't change the server-side sources to gerenate HTML with fixed width. And I really would like to solve it only with CSS if there is any way, even that with JavaScript I could achieve that result.

How can I make all the children auto-fit itself to the parent's width independently of the number of children?

link|improve this question

I'm pretty sure this can't be done strictly with CSS, so (if I'm right) you have to sprinkle in a bit of JavaScript. – Matt Ball May 2 '11 at 14:04
That was my fear. Maybe CSS3 and HTML5 could do something... Or not? – ErickPetru May 2 '11 at 14:11
You need to write your css file dynamically based on parameters from input. – eugeneK May 2 '11 at 14:15
If you're willing to drop support for IE7, you do it with CSS easily. Do you care about IE7? A good idea is to do my magical option, with a JavaScript workaround for <=IE7 – thirtydot May 2 '11 at 16:40
@ErickPetru: See meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/43019/… - I'm only here because I happened to look back at this question. – thirtydot May 2 '11 at 21:34
show 2 more comments
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

For now many use jQuery as a solution to this problem. All you need is one line. This is from your fiddle.

$("div.parent a").css("width", (($("div.parent").width() / $("div.parent a").length ) -2) + "px");
link|improve this answer
feedback

You can use display: table-cell:

See: http://jsfiddle.net/6nSEj/12/ (or with 5 children)

This won't work in IE7 because that browser simply doesn't support display: table and friends.

div.parent {
    ..
    width: 100%;
    display: table;
    table-layout: fixed;
}
div.parent a {
    ..
    display: table-cell;
}
link|improve this answer
1  
Nice! Firefox, Chrome and other good guys are understanding it very well. Unfortunatelly, my client cares about IE7... But I liked your approach for future works, upvoted. – ErickPetru May 3 '11 at 1:02
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.