28

I've got the following situation, and I need some help...

  1. Two divs, same size, same location, one on top of the other
  2. Everything works as expected on desktop browsers
  3. On the iphone/ipad a faint line appears around the border of the divs
  4. This faint line is not always on all four borders. It changes depending on the location of the divs. It looks to be happening as a result of the two divs not lining up properly, but according to their style settings, they are of identical size and location.

You can see the results here: http://www.thoughtartistry.com

Any ideas?

1
  • Good to know I'm not the only one seeing this issue.
    – Mike Grace
    Dec 7, 2011 at 17:33

8 Answers 8

22

I had a similar problem in a recent project where I had background image masks with different background color to colorize the resulting icons in mobile Safari. The problem was that when the page was scaled down by Safari, there was a line of the background color showing around the image, even though it should have been masked. I never found a way to prevent that leaking of the background color when the page is scaled down. It's clearly an error in mobile Safari's algorithms that recalculate the background and mask. I did find a workaround: I put an outline on the element with the same color as the background of the element's parent. The outline is outside the element and therefore masks the part bleeding out. If your element's parent has a pattern background that's drastic, this won't work that well, but if it's a solid color, it'll do just fine.

4
  • 1
    +1 for this solution. Worked great for me and didn't require disabling zooming.
    – steveax
    Jan 24, 2012 at 3:39
  • 1
    This is a great solution - I still find it doesn't always work (it's almost like iOS gets 2 pixels out at some points) but it definitely helps, and doesn't mess with any box layouts. Jun 7, 2012 at 9:22
  • After hours of googling and trying a bunch of things, this finally worked for me. Thanks!
    – gt565k
    Dec 17, 2013 at 18:58
  • 2
    FYI using a transparent outline works (at least in my experience - in ios safari) so no need to match a background color and works over patterns. ie. outline: 1px solid rgba(0,0,0,0)
    – rgb
    Feb 14, 2014 at 4:04
5

A negative margin is the only way I found to prevent this.

For example, if you have a faint horizontal gap between 2 divs, adding a top margin of -1px to the second div will make it overlap slightly and the gap will not reappear as the page is scaled.

Some situations (like image sprites or repeat patterns) may need a little more tweaking, but the general idea is the same. For a sprite, make sure there is no big color change within 1 pixel of the cropping border. The bleed is never more than 1 pixel, so a 1 pixel adjustment is enough.

1
  • 2
    And how would you do it only for iOS devices?
    – refaelio
    Feb 11, 2016 at 17:07
3

The problem is not only with divs matching together, but also with image sprites.

I followed the advise in this thread of setting initial viewport scale to 1.0. The sub-pixel bug was gone, but then I tested my website on other devices, like Android, and realized a full size page is annoying, since users have to re-scale every time it's loaded. So I preferred to disable the scale and wait until Apple fixes it. Then one day I was thinking how to solve the problem with the margins of the page, and I came to this simple solution in CSS:

html {
  min-width: 1024px;
}

Devices capable of this resolution, such as iPad in horizontal position, will set the document scale to 1.0. In my case this is enough solution, since I can show the page is working just right, and the sub-pixel bug is in Safari/iOS, which will be solved in the future hopefully.

1
  • I also found that if the page was not deep enough to fill the page I had to add a min-height also. 672px seems to work for me.
    – cw_dev
    Mar 20, 2013 at 14:55
2

It totally depends on one's situation, but in our case we use negative margins as proposed by this thread or a box shadow since outline only applies to all borders and ie. outline-bottom does not exist.

/*
 * Prevent faint lines between elements.
 * @link http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5832869
 */
box-shadow: 0 1px 0 red;
2
  • Thanks! Works for me.
    – jughosta
    Jul 1, 2015 at 12:33
  • I had this anoying bug in edge where my site showed this constantly (behind the site was a slider, so you saw constantly sliding backgrounds in the back), even with negative margins.... your box-shadow solution saved the day!
    – Dorvalla
    Jun 7, 2016 at 12:19
1

I also solved the iOS sub pixel gap issue (on a full screen site) by using overflow-x: hidden; to stop side ways scrolling & viewpoint scale to stop pitch zooming. I also had holder divs set at width: 101%; and all the elements/image divs inside set to float: left;. This means the sub pixel gaps are all on the left hand site but pushed out of view by the holder div set at 101% width.

0

Remove "clear:both" (if there is) from div below the gap.

0

I also had to solve this. If you are using Div's to define sections only then.

//background.css
.background-color {
  background-color: blue;
}
.background-color div {
  background-color: inherit;
}
0

I'd try playing with meta/viewport options, specifically setting initial scale to 1.0 and disabling user zooming.

https://developer.apple.com/library/archive/documentation/AppleApplications/Reference/SafariHTMLRef/Articles/MetaTags.html

2
  • If you set the initial scale to 1.0 and disable user zooming, won't you then have to create a page 320 pixels wide just for iOS? Otherwise, your normal page (900 px for example) will overflow the screen and the user will be unable to zoom out. Am I misunderstanding something here?
    – Sparky
    May 1, 2011 at 4:20
  • I know it's late but no - your body should fill up the page unless you specify a page width. You should always use a fluid width for the page unless you have a good reason not to.
    – Jared
    Oct 22, 2013 at 8:33

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