41

Inline blocks have this weird space in-between them. I could live with it, up to a point where, if I load more content with an AJAX call, the tiny space goes away. I know I'm missing something here.

div {
    width: 100px;
    height: auto;
    border: 1px solid red;
    outline: 1px solid blue;
    margin: 0;
    padding: 0; 
    display: inline-block;
}

http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/

How to make the spacing consistent in Inline blocks?

4

5 Answers 5

53

The space is in the HTML. There are several possible solutions. From best to worst:

  1. Remove the actual space in the HTML (ideally your server could do this for you when the file is served, or at least your input template could be spaced appropriately) http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/2/
  2. Use float: left instead of display: inline-block, but this has undesirable effects on t he height: http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/3/
  3. Set the container's font-size to 0 and set an appropriate font-size for the internal elements: http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/4/ -- this is pretty simple, but then you can't take advantage of relative font size rules on the internal elements (percentages, em)
10
  • I've been floating for a long time and was hoping for displaying my boxes as inline-blocks now, but this just makes the markup a little bit unreliable. I mean - a layout might be ruined just because of a simple whitespace. Thanks.
    – pyronaur
    May 21, 2013 at 20:35
  • 2
    Most browsers offer a minimum font-size setting, making font-size: 0 completely unreliable.
    – cimmanon
    May 21, 2013 at 20:47
  • I removed whitespaces in server side loop and added an explicit comment about inline blocks and weird tag alignment in PHP.
    – pyronaur
    May 21, 2013 at 20:49
  • @cimmanon define "most browsers," because I've never seen that be the case (although I agree it's not the ideal option; removing the whitespace is probably the best, at least for now) May 21, 2013 at 20:51
  • 1
    Opera has had it since forever, Chrome, Firefox, Safari. Seems like "most browsers" to me.
    – cimmanon
    May 21, 2013 at 21:00
24

http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/1/

<div>...</div><div>...</div>
              ^
              |--- no whitespace/new line here.

Your spaces were the new lines the browser converted to "spaces" when displaying it.

Or you could try to hack a bit with CSS:

A flexbox conveniently ignores whitespace between its child elements and will display similarly to consecutive inline-block elements.

http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/470/

body { display: flex; flex-wrap: wrap; align-items: end; }

Old answer (still applies to older, pre-flexbox browsers) http://jsfiddle.net/AWMMT/6/

body { white-space: -0.125em; }
body > * { white-space: 0; /* reset to default */ }
7
  • 1
    Oh god. Is that thing still here? I forgot about that since I haven't used inline-blocks for a while now. Is there a name for that so I can keep tabs on whether someone is going to "fix" it someday in browsers ? Now I remember why I usually float my boat.
    – pyronaur
    May 21, 2013 at 20:32
  • 5
    it's called 'whitespace' May 21, 2013 at 20:33
  • @Norris just added a CSS method to prevent this spacing here
    – bwoebi
    May 21, 2013 at 20:34
  • It works for me in gecko as in webkit with no problems and won't affect any additional non-whitespace characters you may want to add between the divs (like a -). (the advantage to a font-size)
    – bwoebi
    May 21, 2013 at 20:40
  • 4
    Beware of magic numbers like -2, etc.: css-tricks.com/magic-numbers-in-css
    – cimmanon
    May 21, 2013 at 20:46
10

There’s actually a really simple way to remove whitespace from inline-block that’s both easy and semantic. It’s called a custom font with zero-width spaces, which allows you to collapse the whitespace (added by the browser for inline elements when they're on separate lines) at the font level using a very tiny font. Once you declare the font, you just change the font-family on the container and back again on the children, and voila. Like this:

@font-face{ 
    font-family: 'NoSpace';
    src: url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.eot');
    src: url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.eot?#iefix') format('embedded-opentype'),
         url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.woff') format('woff'),
         url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.ttf') format('truetype'),
         url('../Fonts/zerowidthspaces.svg#NoSpace') format('svg');
}

body {
    font-face: 'OpenSans', sans-serif;
}

.inline-container {
    font-face: 'NoSpace';
}

.inline-container > * {
    display: inline-block;
    font-face: 'OpenSans', sans-serif;
}

Suit to taste. Here’s a download to the font I just cooked up in font-forge and converted with FontSquirrel webfont generator. Took me all of 5 minutes. The css @font-face declaration is included: zipped zero-width space font. It's in Google Drive so you'll need to click File > Download to save it to your computer. You'll probably need to change the font paths as well if you copy the declaration to your main css file.

0
9

You can comment the whitespace out.

Original answer from 2013

Like:

<span>Text</span><!--

--><span>Text 2</span>

Edit 2016:

I also like the following method, where you just put the closing bracket right before the following element.

<span>Text</span

><span>Text 2</span>
1

Also you can do it like this (which IMHO,I believe is sintatically correct)

<div class="div1">...</div>
<div class="div1">...</div>
.
.

.div1{
    display:inline-block;
}
.div1::before, div1::after { white-space-collapse:collapse; }
4
  • 2
    Can you provide documentation for white-space-collapse? I don't believe this is a valid property.
    – roydukkey
    Oct 22, 2014 at 8:57
  • @roydukkey Hi! By the time I answered, I had found it here link. But it slipped my mind it was still a draft. The property has been added as a draft to CSS TextLevel 4: link.
    – user3133486
    Dec 30, 2014 at 19:20
  • I see. This is interesting, but I wish the solution is just to have browsers not behave as they currently do, to not have this goofy extra space.
    – roydukkey
    Dec 31, 2014 at 3:50
  • Based on the latest from caniuse, this is not a valid property: This CSS property (formerly known as white-space-collapse or white-space-collapsing) is not supported in any modern browser, nor are there any known plans to support it. caniuse.com/#search=white-space-collapse
    – Webreality
    Apr 23, 2019 at 18:02

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