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I am working on a blog site using WordPress and Susy grids. There is a <p> tag (with mild profanity) near the top of the page (link) with padding-top: 4em. Somehow this padding is slipping up under the previous two siblings, an <h1> and a <div>. The html is as follows:

<h1 class="entry-title">A Manifesto, of Sorts</h1>
    <div class="entry-meta">
        <span class="posted-on"><a href="http://howtolearnalanguagelikeaboss.com/?p=6" rel="bookmark"><time class="entry-date published updated" datetime="2015-11-22T02:07:31+00:00">November 22, 2015</time></a></span>       </div><!-- .entry-meta -->
</header><!-- .entry-header -->

<div class="entry-content">
    <p id="manifesto">F--- Berlitz. F--- Rosetta. Do it yourself and do it in style.</p>

The style on this element is as follows:

#manifesto {
  text-align: center;
  font-style: italic;
  font-weight: 300;
  padding: 2em 0 1em 0;
}

I can tell, using the Chrome inspector, that the <p> is both really tall and that the padding-top (the green-highlighted area in the inspector) is way above the <h1> sibling. I am stumped... I tried margin-top and the same issue happened. Can anyone explain what is going wrong? My styles are not too complicated, I don't think, so I am not sure what could be conflicting. Any help would be very much appreciated.

Thanks,
Dave

2 Answers 2

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In main.css:457,458:

header {
  width: 100%;
  float: left;
  margin-left: 0;
  margin-right: 0;
}

There is a float: left; on the header. This effectively takes it out of the normal flow of content. Either stop floating that header element, or do a clear after it.

2
  • Yes, thank you! I had a susy mixin added to the header to make it span the width, but I guess this was not necessary because removing it fixed my problem and didn't mess anything else up. Not the most principled approach to web development, I know. I'm working on it. Thanks again. Nov 26, 2015 at 20:03
  • No problem. I have no idea what a susy mixin is. I just inspected the .entry-content CSS and the elements around it. Noticed it was butting up against the parent element, so I figured something was going on with .entry-header. Sure enough, I saw the float and figured that was culprit. Inspecting elements is an awesome thing.
    – jeffjenx
    Nov 26, 2015 at 20:07
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Try:

.entry-content {
    display: inline-block;
}

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