Yes you can put a div in center without using width property as per your need.
Say you have some content with variable width. If it is just text, you can probably get away with text-align:center
. But say it is an image, and that image may have different dimensions. How do you consistently center it on the page?
First, put the content inside a floated div, because floated divs will shrink wrap around the content. Second, wrap that div in another floated div.
Now here's the good part. Relatively position the outer float (yellow) left:50%
, so that the left edge is at the middle of the page. Then relatively position the inner float (red) left:-50%
to shift it exactly 1/2 of the yellow div's width to the left, so that it is centered. Note that the yellow div and the red div are exactly the same width, because the yellow is also a float, so it is shrink wrapped to fit around the red one.
The background colors and heights are included to make it clear what is happening. Normally, the yellow div would have no height spec and no padding, and would be set to your background color. The red div is the one that we are trying to center.
For reference you can check link
http://www.tightcss.com/centering/center_variable_width.htm
Sample example to show how it works
.container
{
float: left;
position: relative;
left: 50%;
padding-top: 10px;
}
.center {
float: left;
position: relative;
left: -50%;
background: red;
}
<div class="main_container">
<div class="container">
<div class="center">sample content</div>
<div style="clear:both;"> </div>
</div>
<div class="clear"> </div>
</div>
.container
is 100% wide, thus, technically it IS centered, but taking up the whole width.