Well, the actual cause for the wrong layout is the combination of text-align: center
on your ngg-gallery-thumbnail-box
(I'll call that box from now on) with position: absolute
+ display: inline-block
on the inner ngg-gallery-thumbnail
(I'll call that thumb).
It goes like this:
We apply text-align: center
to box. This will cause it to center its inline children. It does this (conceptually) by placing each child's left edge at the current "text cursor" position (which, importantly, starts out at box's center), then moving it towards the left to "recenter" it. This is - also importantly - box's "job".
We declare the thumb as inline-block
. This will (among other things) cause it to follow text-align
of its parent, meaning that - at this point in time - it's centered.
We then declare thumb position: absolute
. This will take it out of the flow, positioning its left edge at the same point where it originally would be - because we're not specifying left
/right
.
The "naive" interpretation of this would be that it's still at the center of box, and everything would be fine, but we get a "side effect"...
Because we took thumb out of the flow, box no longer has any inline content, meaning its text cursor is at the center, and it doesn't need to center anything. Its "job" is done.
But since thumb is inline-block, it's original position is still based on box's text cursor position (the center), meaning that when we make it position: absolute
, its left edge will be placed at that center. It's not horizontally centered inside box, because from box's point of view, there are no children in its flow that need centering.
This is halfways to a chicken and egg problem, so Chrome seems to get confused when it does a re-render of the page for the console.
This explanation may also be a bit confused, but you can see the result here - and even in this simple example, Chrome's console will do a reflow when you try to inspect it. In this example it even seems to enough to resize the window without opening the console (v17.0.963.56):
http://jsfiddle.net/h66Gj/
As far as I'm aware, the way it renders it first, is the way it's "meant to be" (last I checked, the W3C recommendations were vague about it, but at least Firefox agrees with the pre-inspect render).
There are many ways to get around it, my favorite being to only use text-align: center
to center... text, and try to use e.g. margin: auto
to center other content.
<html>
is enough) - it's not enough to just bring up the console.