13

So I have a div in my body that's a percentage width, and inside that a div with inline style as follows:

text-align: center; margin-left: -15px; margin-right: -15px; overflow: hidden;

As you can see, I have text-align: center; on, which would, if the image was small enough for the div, center the image. But the percentage width div is definitely not going to be big enough on my 1280x800 screen.

The negative margins are to overcome some padding on it's parent div. The overflow:hidden makes things look like I want, not messy. So, it's kind of working like I want it, like the header image at onenaught.com. It will become more visible on the right as you make the browser wider, but not expand from both sides, because it's not centered.

So, I wonder if there's any way to center the image. Know of any?

Edit: page here.

5 Answers 5

33

You can actually do this by setting the margin-left and margin-right on the image to -100%.

Here's a jsFiddle demonstrating this. (use the one below instead, it's better)

It is an even better idea to set the margin-left and margin-right on the image to a much larger negative number, e.g. -9999%, as with the -100% value, the image starts to move off-center as soon as the div's containing element becomes less wide than 3 times the width of the div:

margin-left: -100% + the div's width: 100% + margin-right: -100% = 3x div width

You can check the difference in behaviour between this jsFiddle and the previous one by toggling the overflow to visible and resizing the result window to less than 300% of the width of the div.

Quoting @MaxOriola on the range of supported browsers (from the comments):

I've retested second fiddle ... in Firefox, Chrome, Safari (last versions) and Explorer 8, 9, 10. Works fine in all of them.

Note: Image element has to be displayed inline or inline-block and centered horizontally with text-align: center (on wrapper element).

// ALL of the JS below is for demonstration purposes only

$(document).ready(function() {
  $('a').click(function() {
    $('body > div').toggleClass('overflow');
  });
})
img {
  margin: 0 -9999% 0 -9999%;
}


/* ALL of the CSS below is for demonstration purposes only */

body {
  text-align: center;
  font-family: verdana;
  font-size: 10pt;
  line-height: 20pt;
}

body>div {
  margin: 0px auto;
  width: 40%;
  background-color: lightblue;
  overflow: hidden;
}

img {
  vertical-align: top;
}

.overflow {
  overflow: visible;
}
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/2.1.1/jquery.min.js"></script>
<div>40% wide div [<a href="#">toggle overflow</a>]
  <div>
    <img src="http://via.placeholder.com/400x200" />
  </div>
  400px wide image
</div>

6
  • 2
    +10 This totally works and saved a rewrite of the underlying HTML. Jun 20, 2014 at 17:33
  • Does someone knows the range of supported browsers?
    – jmarceli
    Aug 6, 2015 at 9:09
  • 1
    I wish there was a way to bookmark answers. This is one of those rare gems that are not documented and saves hours of work. P.S. IMO this should have been an accepted answer.
    – MadOgre
    Dec 22, 2015 at 6:35
  • Testing in Chrome, it only works if you don't set image width and height attributes.
    – Max Oriola
    Apr 4, 2016 at 6:26
  • 1
    Sorry, I tested outside jsFiddle and I can't reproduce it. Probably using first fiddle with very wide image. I've retested second fiddle (the one with margin: 0 -9999% 0 -9999%) in Firefox, Chrome, Safari (last versions) and Explorer 8, 9,10. Works fine in all of them. Thanks.
    – Max Oriola
    May 14, 2016 at 6:25
28

One option would be to absolutely position the image with left: 50% and then use a negative margin-left on the image equal to half of the image's width. Of course, this requires the containing div to have its positioning set to relative or absolute in order to provide the proper container type for the image to be absolutely positioned within.

The other option (and probably better) is instead of using an image tag, just set the image as the background for the parent div, and use the background positioning CSS attributes to center it. Not only does this make sure it's centered without forcing absolute positioning, but it also automatically crops overflow, so the overflow attribute isn't necessary.

3
  • Marking answer because it mostly covers both answers submitted. Couldn't get things working with the background method, and haven't yer trued the absolute positioning. Thanks, though.
    – Nathaniel
    Sep 18, 2009 at 4:20
  • +1 because the first solution will also work for non-images. The question does specify images, but I came here looking to centre a div in a too-small container. Thanks.
    – Johno
    Jun 7, 2012 at 11:07
  • link seems broken found it here w3schools.com/cssref/pr_background-position.asp now, solution was "background-position:center;" thanks
    – John
    Aug 13, 2015 at 8:08
5

Using css transform, for an image inside a container with overflow: hidden and a set width:

img {
    position: relative;
    left: 50%;
    transform: translateX(-50%);
    display: block; /* optional */
}

jsFiddle here (I borrowed part of Mathijs Flietstra's jsFiddle, so thanks).

1
  • You should also include the -webkit-transform css property to make it work on iOS.
    – Max Oriola
    Apr 10, 2016 at 17:48
2

consider using the image as a background ;)

use background-position to get what you want.

you may need a javascript solution to achieve consistent cross-browser results

1
  • I would encourage this solution if image is purely decorative. A background-position: 50% 50% works fine everywhere.
    – Max Oriola
    Dec 5, 2016 at 9:16
2

I have found another solution

<style type="text/css">
    .container {
        width:600px; //set how much you want
        overflow: hidden; 
        position: relative;
     }
     .containerSecond{
        position: absolute; 
        top:0px; 
        left:-100%; 
        width:300%;
     }
     .image{
        width: 800px; //your image size 
     }           
</style>

and in body

<div class="container">
   <div class="containerSecond">
       <image src="..." class="" />
   </div>
</div>

This will center your image whenever your container is bigger or smaller. In this case your image should be bigger than 300% of container to not be centered, but in that case you can make with of containerSecond bigger, and it will work

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