17

There've been a few similar posts (offsetting an html anchor to adjust for fixed header, for example), but those solution doesn't work for my particular case.

I am using jQuery to populate a Table of Contents, specifically the method described here: http://css-tricks.com/automatic-table-of-contents/. It searches for the h2 tags within the article, and then creates anchors links.

The problem is I'm using a fixed header. When I click on one of these anchor links, the target h2 is underneath the header. One temporary solution I'm using is:

h2:target{
  padding-top:[header-height];
}

This works until you scroll back up, and there's a huge gap in the middle of the content. Do y'all have any ideas on how I can offset these anchor links to account for the header? I'd like to keep the HTML as semantic as possible. Any help would be appreciated.

Here's a jsFiddle of what exactly I'm talking about: http://jsfiddle.net/aweber9/GbNFv/

Thanks.

5 Answers 5

45

You could include padding-top and then use negative margin-top to balance it out.

jsFiddle

h2 {
    padding-top: 70px;
    margin-top: -70px;
}
4
  • This is exactly what I was trying to do. Can't believe it was that simple. Thanks, man.
    – aaronweber
    Mar 31, 2013 at 6:10
  • I just found that this can cause display issues in Firefox. I have a lot of <h3> anchors on a page with submit buttons. The minus margins prevent some of the submit buttons from being clicked as they 'overlap' the submit button elements.
    – AfromanJ
    Sep 6, 2013 at 9:06
  • This works like a charm in Chrome and Firefox, but is there an IE-friendly solution? Doesn't work in IE8, IE9 or IE10 for me. It's possible this is due to some other code of course but if anyone has insight...
    – Ennui
    Sep 11, 2013 at 19:27
  • I've found this works some of the time, but can cause layout issues in other situations. In those situations, try this answer
    – floer32
    Jun 19, 2022 at 3:37
19

Well. I had this issue as well. The best and fastest solution I could find here is to use the following code snippet in your Style tag or CSS file.

html
{
  scroll-padding-top: 12vw; /* height of sticky header */
}
0
9

@Daniel Imms solution is good but if headers had top margin it would be reset by this negative top margin. I found a solution that uses pseudoclasses:

h2:before {
    display: block;
    content: " ";
    height: 20px;  /* Give height of your fixed element */
    margin-top: -20px; /* Give negative margin of your fixed element */
    visibility: hidden;
}

Thus this doesn't reset original top-margin.

1
  • Thank you very much! This should be upvoted, since this does also work on mobile browsers (chrome, safari) whereas padding/margin-only does not work on mobile.
    – Grimm
    Nov 15, 2022 at 11:58
2

I find both answers together provides the most robust solution across multiple browsers. I include both in my CSS...

a[name]:not([href]) {
    padding-top: 90px;
    margin-top: -90px;
}
a[name]:not([href]):before {
    display: block;
    content: " ";
    padding-top: 90px;
    margin-top: -90px;
    visibility: hidden;
}
2

This worked for me.

:target {
    display: block;
    position: relative;
    top: -100px;
    visibility: hidden;
}

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