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I have an element which may contain very big amounts of data, but I don't want it to ruin the page layout, so I set max-height: 100px and overflow:auto, hoping for scrollbars to appear when the content does not fit. It all works fine in Firefox and IE7, but IE8 behaves as if overflow:hidden was present instead of overflow:auto. I tried overflow:scroll, still does not help, IE8 simply truncates the content without showing scrollbars. Changing max-height declaration to height makes overflow work OK, it's the combination of max-height and overflow:auto that breaks things.

This is also logged as an official bug in the final, release version of IE8:

http://connect.microsoft.com/IE/feedback/ViewFeedback.aspx?FeedbackID=408759

Does anyone know of a workaround? For now I resorted to using height instead of max-height, but it leaves plenty of empty space in case there isn't much data.

Before you tell me to do that, yes, I've reported the bug to IE developers :)

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3 Answers

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This is a really nasty bug as it affects us heavily on Stack Overflow with <pre> code blocks, which have max-height:600 and width:auto.

It is logged as a bug in the final version of IE8 with no fix.

http://connect.microsoft.com/IE/feedback/ViewFeedback.aspx?FeedbackID=408759

There is a really, really hacky CSS workaround:

http://my.opera.com/dbloom/blog/2009/03/11/css-hack-for-ie8-standards-mode

/*
SUPER nasty IE8 hack to deal with this bug
*/
pre 
{
    max-height: none\9 
}

and of course conditional CSS as others have mentioned, but I dislike that because it means you're serving up extra HTML cruft in every page request.

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vote up 1 vote down

I saw this logged as a fixed bug in RC1. But I've found a variation that seems to cause a hard assert render failure. Involves these two styles in a nested table.

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
<head>
    <title>Test</title>
    <style type="text/css">
    .calendarBody
	{
	    overflow: scroll;
	    max-height: 500px;
	}
	</style>
</head>
<body>
    <table>
    <tbody>
        <tr>
	    <td>
	        This is a cell in the outer table.
		<div class="calendarBody">
		    <table>
		        <tbody>
			    <tr>
			        <td>
				    This is a cell in the inner table.
				</td>
		            </tr>
			</tbody>
	            </table>
		</div>
	    </td>
	</tr>
    </tbody>
</table>
</body>
</html>
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vote up 1 vote down

I'm using the X-UA-Compatible meta tag for IE8 beta 1 support:

<head>
<meta http-equiv="X-UA-Compatible" content="IE=7" />
<title>w00t i haz ie8 beta 1</title>
</head>

It's lame, but it works. I'd used a separate IE8 CSS file, but we had problems with overflow in relatively positioned div's and testers using (unreleased) IE8 beta 2 builds said the site was unusable, so we had to fall back to using the IE7 rendering. I'd recommend doing that until IE8 beta 2 is out.

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