646

I have a very odd issue... in every browser and mobile version I encountered this behavior:

  • all the browsers have a top menu when you load the page (showing the address bar for example) which slide up when you start scrolling the page.
  • 100vh sometimes is calculated only on the visible part of a viewport, so when the browser bar slide up 100vh increases (in terms of pixels)
  • all layout re-paint and re-adjust since the dimensions have changed
  • a bad jumpy effect for user experience

How can avoid this problem? When I first heard of viewport-height I was excited and I thought I could use it for fixed height blocks instead of using javascript, but now I think the only way to do that is in fact javascript with some resize event...

you can see the problem at: sample site

Can anyone help me with / suggest a CSS solution?


simple test code:

/* maybe i can track the issue whe it occours... */
$(function(){
  var resized = -1;
  $(window).resize(function(){
    $('#currenth').val( $('.vhbox').eq(1).height() );
    if (++resized) $('#currenth').css('background:#00c');
  })
  .resize();
})
*{ margin:0; padding:0; }

/*
  this is the box which should keep constant the height...
  min-height to allow content to be taller than viewport if too much text
*/
.vhbox{
  min-height:100vh;
  position:relative;
}

.vhbox .t{
  display:table;
  position:relative;
  width:100%;
  height:100vh;
}

.vhbox .c{
  height:100%;
  display:table-cell;
  vertical-align:middle;
  text-align:center;
}
<div class="vhbox" style="background-color:#c00">
  <div class="t"><div class="c">
  this div height should be 100% of viewport and keep this height when scrolling page
    <br>
    <!-- this input highlight if resize event is fired -->
    <input type="text" id="currenth">
  </div></div>
</div>

<div class="vhbox" style="background-color:#0c0">
  <div class="t"><div class="c">
  this div height should be 100% of viewport and keep this height when scrolling page
  </div></div>
</div>

<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.1/jquery.min.js"></script>

9
  • 2
    if i understood the question well the problem you are facing is in mobile browser the height is more than visible viewport hight..right? May 9, 2016 at 9:53
  • 1
    @GauravAggarwal nope, exatly the opposite: the real viewport height is greater than the one provided by the browser when its address bar is visible... May 9, 2016 at 10:05
  • 3
    Since my question is becoming popular, I would like to give my 5 cents: wouldn't be more intelligent to mantain the real window height and only slide up the menu bar? it doesn't seems so difficult. In fact should be easier... finger up -> menu bar slide up until invisible, finger down -> menu bar slide down until completely visible... all altogether with the body without any re-adjusting and jumpy effect... Sep 3, 2017 at 10:01
  • 7
    Google has some good info on this: developers.google.com/web/updates/2016/12/url-bar-resizing You can use 100% instead of 100vh IF you have changed body height to 100% Dec 16, 2018 at 10:32
  • 2
    I have noticed the opposite. Unfortunately 100vh in Chrome on iOS equals outerWidth instead of innerWidth, which is causing me problems since those browsers bars only disappear when you scroll the body element. Unfortunately it is a child element that is being scrolled on my website, so the bars never disappear, and my website navigation is obscured by those browser bars...
    – oldboy
    Mar 24, 2019 at 1:44

37 Answers 37

324

Unfortunately this is intentional…

This is a well know issue (at least in safari mobile), which is intentional, as it prevents other problems. Benjamin Poulain replied to a webkit bug:

This is completely intentional. It took quite a bit of work on our part to achieve this effect. :)

The base problem is this: the visible area changes dynamically as you scroll. If we update the CSS viewport height accordingly, we need to update the layout during the scroll. Not only that looks like shit, but doing that at 60 FPS is practically impossible in most pages (60 FPS is the baseline framerate on iOS).

It is hard to show you the “looks like shit” part, but imagine as you scroll, the contents moves and what you want on screen is continuously shifting.

Dynamically updating the height was not working, we had a few choices: drop viewport units on iOS, match the document size like before iOS 8, use the small view size, use the large view size.

From the data we had, using the larger view size was the best compromise. Most website using viewport units were looking great most of the time.

Nicolas Hoizey has researched this quite a bit: https://nicolas-hoizey.com/2015/02/viewport-height-is-taller-than-the-visible-part-of-the-document-in-some-mobile-browsers.html

No fix planned

At this point, there is not much you can do except refrain from using viewport height on mobile devices. Chrome changed to this as well in 2016:

17
  • 14
    Yep, as I think. Only viable solution is a scripted solution. From what I know, $(window).height() is not affected by this bug, so I'll go that way. thank you! May 9, 2016 at 10:52
  • 32
    Since Chrome version 56 the vh is always calculated as if the URL bar is hidden and therefore vh does not increase on scroll, except for position:fixed. This is similar to the implementation on Safari. Read more: developers.google.com/web/updates/2016/12/url-bar-resizing Jan 10, 2018 at 23:16
  • 4
    Latest Chrome does not change vh or <html> 100% height after initial load. This is actually great - as layout thrashing/reflow when URL Bar hides can look dreadful. Firefox and Edge Mobile still dynamically update vh and <html> height, causing lots of tearing and resizing of all components when scrolling, especially bad if using SVGs for background images
    – Drenai
    May 11, 2018 at 9:50
  • 38
    Let me rephrase that: “we broke our browser, but it was so much work that we are going to keep it”... Is it just me, or does apple more and more become what Microsoft was 10 years ago?
    – st-h
    May 20, 2018 at 9:55
  • 17
    For anyone who's still following with this in 2019, the issue still persists. I'll summarise the latest situation as given in this post - Using vh will size the element as if the URL bar is always hidden while using % will size the element as if the URL bar were always showing. Though there's no "perfect" solution for this, the only workaround I can suggest is to use 100% for the 1st section of your page where the URL bar is usually showing when user opens it and use 100vh for all other sections. Oct 16, 2019 at 17:56
241

You can try min-height: -webkit-fill-available; in your css instead of 100vh. It should be solved

13
  • 37
    I would leave min-height: 100vh; in as a fallback where -webkit-fill-available isn't supported.
    – Tammy Tee
    Apr 3, 2019 at 3:02
  • 3
    This was a very nice solution, but seems to have changed in iOS 13 — I'm seeing extra space at the bottom of the first section, but it works exactly as desired in Safari for iOS 12.x codepen.io/RwwL/pen/PowjvPq (you'd have to fork this then view it in CodePen debug mode on iOS to really see what I mean).
    – RwwL
    Dec 26, 2019 at 23:00
  • 16
    Thanks this is so clean! btw I ended using this version, since my app relies on height to be non-zero at first height: 100vh; max-height: -webkit-fill-available;
    – Joe Seifi
    Apr 27, 2020 at 21:11
  • 52
    Since Chrome v84, -webkit-fill-available is no longer supported. :/
    – TheCat
    Jul 21, 2020 at 11:14
  • 4
    This is awesome. I'm pretty sure order matters here. We're pretty used to doing things like this: -webkit-bleedingedgethingy: 1; bleedingedgethingy: 1; so when the regular version makes it into the spec, that takes precedence. But here you want the vendor specific one to override the normal setting so height: 100vh; height: -webkit-fill-available; not the other way around. Sep 29, 2020 at 2:26
219

We have new viewport units lvh, svh and dvh to the rescue. This was demonstrated in the latest Google I/O 2022 video on web works.

You would probably want to stick with dvh for the browser to adapt to the mobile device's hidden tabs while scrolling. It works the similar way for width with dvw, lvw and svw units.

Here is a neat illustration from the video: https://youtu.be/Xy9ZXRRgpLk?t=982

Google I/O 2022 on new viewport units

Can I use?

This was currently working on my Chrome canary with the flag "Experimental features" enabled.

10
  • 1
    @ViBoNaCci You can check the updates here: bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=1093055
    – m4n0
    Sep 3, 2022 at 7:48
  • 9
    December 2022 we can finally use dvh with confidence.
    – ViBoNaCci
    Nov 15, 2022 at 9:40
  • 4
    Note that this does lead to some jank. on iOS 16.3, even though the dynamic viewport height changes smoothly, elements with 100dvh absolutely do not; they only update their height when the animation finishes. Feb 3, 2023 at 17:05
  • 5
    As of Feb 2023 you should still use a fallback (e.g. height: 100vh; height: 100dvh;) - caniuse.com/viewport-unit-variants
    – Arth
    Feb 24, 2023 at 13:23
  • 8
    I can't believe it but is this true? It's May 2023, I just tested and it WORKS like a charm: 100svh is what we all have been waiting for.
    – Marc
    May 4, 2023 at 16:46
88

update 2023: please see https://stackoverflow.com/a/72245072/4773272 which is the better way nowadays.


Legacy answer: in my app I do it like so (typescript and nested postcss, so change the code accordingly):

const appHeight = () => {
    const doc = document.documentElement
    doc.style.setProperty('--app-height', `${window.innerHeight}px`)
}
window.addEventListener('resize', appHeight)
appHeight()

in your css:

:root {
    --app-height: 100%;
}

html,
body {
    padding: 0;
    margin: 0;
    overflow: hidden;
    width: 100vw;
    height: 100vh;

    @media not all and (hover:hover) {
        height: var(--app-height);
    }
}

it works at least on chrome mobile and ipad. What doesn't work is when you add your app to homescreen on iOS and change the orientation a few times - somehow the zoom levels mess with the innerHeight value, I might post an update if I find a solution to it.

Demo

5
  • 3
    I would like to add a warning that "@media not all and (hover:hover) {" is not a bulletproof way to detect mobile browsers. Feel free to use something else. Jul 11, 2019 at 15:07
  • I like this approach a lot. One comment I would make is on the use of the event listener. This causes a re-paint of the page and I only use it in certain scenarios when it is absolutely critical for the user to see the correct viewport (i.e. the home page initial view) Apr 3, 2020 at 14:55
  • @AndreasHerd is this sass, not css? I'm not familiar with nesting the media query inside the body selector area Nov 2, 2021 at 2:14
  • 1
    @asyncawait I used postcss in this case, but most css post-processors support nested css. You can easily flatten it out into regular css, though. Nov 2, 2021 at 7:48
  • I wanted to give a small update: please check out dynamic units in css instead. height: 100dvh is probably doing the magic nowadays. Oct 31, 2023 at 22:22
52

For me such trick made a job:

height: calc(100vh - calc(100vh - 100%))
8
  • 5
    Is it different than height: 100% ?
    – FF_Dev
    May 30, 2020 at 12:00
  • 1
    Yes, 100vh is 100% of a viewport height (your device), when pure 100% only fill all available parent area (parent block can have e.g. 50px height and it will fill only to this parent height). In big short. Jun 4, 2020 at 12:05
  • This simple trick did work indeed, although the address bar doesn't hide, but it's better then the other solutions. upvote from me.
    – Hades
    Jul 3, 2020 at 8:34
  • 55
    This actually the same as write height: 100% because it translates to 100vh - 100vh + 100%. So this approach can be called "don't use vh at all". Important note: in order to be able to use height: 100%, you must propagate that height from the root element through all the children till the target element. Sometimes it may be too difficult Apr 7, 2021 at 9:25
  • 3
    What @SleepWalker said is correct, The result is exactly the same as Hight: 100%. Jan 1, 2022 at 11:55
48

Look at this answer: https://css-tricks.com/the-trick-to-viewport-units-on-mobile/

// First we get the viewport height and we multiple it by 1% to get a value for a vh unit
let vh = window.innerHeight * 0.01;
// Then we set the value in the --vh custom property to the root of the document
document.documentElement.style.setProperty('--vh', `${vh}px`);

// We listen to the resize event
window.addEventListener('resize', () => {
  // We execute the same script as before
  let vh = window.innerHeight * 0.01;
  document.documentElement.style.setProperty('--vh', `${vh}px`);
});
body {
  background-color: #333;
}

.module {
  height: 100vh; /* Use vh as a fallback for browsers that do not support Custom Properties */
  height: calc(var(--vh, 1vh) * 100);
  margin: 0 auto;
  max-width: 30%;
}

.module__item {
  align-items: center;
  display: flex;
  height: 20%;
  justify-content: center;
}

.module__item:nth-child(odd) {
  background-color: #fff;
  color: #F73859;
}

.module__item:nth-child(even) {
  background-color: #F73859;
  color: #F1D08A;
}
<div class="module">
  <div class="module__item">20%</div>
  <div class="module__item">40%</div>
  <div class="module__item">60%</div>
  <div class="module__item">80%</div>
  <div class="module__item">100%</div>
</div>

4
  • very nice solution. Just in my case, I didn't use ponyfill, but rather logic that for all desktop sites I use 100vh, while for mobile I use var (we don't have IE11 in mobile world).
    – FrEaKmAn
    Feb 4, 2020 at 14:16
  • 2
    Only solution that worked for nested elements. In anyone else has to replace a couple hundred instances, you can (at least most of the time) match the regexp (-)?([\d.]+)vh and replace it with calc(var(--vh) * $1$2)
    – ecc521
    Apr 4, 2020 at 18:09
  • However, there is a warning: Updating the value of --vh will trigger a repaint of the page and the user may experience a jump as a result.
    – 123
    Nov 6, 2022 at 14:09
  • there are multiplication losses on * 0.01. I have about 20px. better to have --100vh variable which will be set from let full_vh = window.innerHeight - 1; Dec 7, 2022 at 21:19
39

Set your body position to fixed, set the height to 100%

body { position: fixed; height: 100% }

That's it, then the mobile browser will understand what you want.

Now the body will grow or shrink following the browser's view height, no matter if there is a URL bar or not, or if there are tabs (like in mobile safari) or not. The body will always get full view.

4
  • 4
    This actually ended up working for me. Instead of the body element body, I used the above styles on my <main> element which is a direct child of body and it solved it for Safari, Chrome, and DuckDuckGo on mobile. I'm not sure if it's considered "best practice" or not but ill make sure to comment if I find anything that breaks as I build out the site more. May 2, 2022 at 19:42
  • Thanks, it was also a solution for me that works well! Oct 20, 2022 at 9:15
  • 2
    magically works for me. Not sure if this is safe to use. But using it anyway. Will update if something breaks. Jan 5, 2023 at 5:02
  • This forces the browser toolbar to stay open. If you're ok with that, then this is great. I needed to use overscroll-behavior: none along with this for it to work well. But then it indeed does work well. Oct 10, 2023 at 16:04
31

You can do this by adding following script and style

function appHeight() {
  const doc = document.documentElement
  doc.style.setProperty('--vh', (window.innerHeight*.01) + 'px');
}

window.addEventListener('resize', appHeight);
appHeight();

Style

.module {
  height: 100vh; /* Fallback for browsers that do not support Custom Properties */
  height: calc(var(--vh, 1vh) * 100);
}
2
26

For many of the sites I build the client will ask for a 100vh banner and just as you have found, it results in a bad "jumpy" experience on mobile when you begin to scroll. This is how I solve the problem for a smooth consistent experience across all devices:

I first set my banner element CSS to height:100vh

Then I use jQuery to get the height in pixels of my banner element and apply an inline style using this height.

var viewportHeight = $('.banner').outerHeight();
$('.banner').css({ height: viewportHeight });

Doing this solves the issue on mobile devices as when the page loads, the banner element is set to 100vh using CSS and then jQuery overrides this by putting inline CSS on my banner element which stops it from resizing when a user begins to scroll.

However, on desktop if a user resizes their browser window my banner element won't resize because it now has a fixed height set in pixels due to the above jQuery. To address this I use Mobile Detect to add a 'mobile' class to the body of my document. And then I wrap the above jQuery in an if statement:

if ($('body').hasClass('mobile')) {
  var viewportHeight = $('.banner').outerHeight();
  $('.banner').css({ height: viewportHeight });
}

As a result, if a user is on a mobile device the class 'mobile' is present on the body of my page and the above jQuery is executed. So my banner element will only get the inline CSS applied on mobile devices meanwhile on desktop the original 100vh CSS rule remains in place.

2
  • 5
    I would tweak it to use $('.banner').css({ height: window.innerHeight }); instead, which is the "real" height of the viewport. Example of how innerHeight works
    – Martin
    Jul 13, 2017 at 9:17
  • 12
    Which is document.querySelector('.banner').style.height = window.innerHeight; for people writing actual JavaScript. Mar 12, 2019 at 18:14
21

I came up with a React component – check it out if you use React or browse the source code if you don't, so you can adapt it to your environment.

It sets the fullscreen div's height to window.innerHeight and then updates it on window resizes.

1
10

As I was looking for a solution some days, here is mine for everyone using VueJS with Vuetify (my solution uses v-app-bar, v-navigation-drawer and v-footer): I created App.scss (used in App.vue) with the following content:

.v-application {
    height: 100vh;
    height: -webkit-fill-available;
}

.v-application--wrap {
    min-height: 100vh !important;
    min-height: -webkit-fill-available !important;
}

2
  • 1
    This seemed to work at first for me, but then I noticed that it doesn't resize the container on orientation change on mobile devices. Jun 26, 2020 at 12:32
  • 1
    html { height: 100vh; height: -webkit-fill-available; } body, body > div, .v-application, .v-application--wrap { height: 100vh; height: -webkit-fill-available; min-height: 100vh; min-height: -webkit-fill-available; } Saved both problems for me. Finally Jun 26, 2020 at 13:04
7

You can try giving position: fixed; top: 0; bottom: 0; properties to your container.

3
  • 3
    Add more info on why this is an answer to the question. Feb 14, 2019 at 12:35
  • I find this very effective in my case, using a flex layout to show a small vertically centered box which can scroll when it grows in height
    – Matteo T.
    Sep 4, 2021 at 14:55
  • This is a great answer. I used inset: 0 instead of top and bottom. By placing position fixed and inset 0 onto the html, the body will scroll when its height hits the limit of the html. This allows for the disappearing address bar to be locked in place. Nov 2, 2021 at 17:32
5

The the problem still remains to this date, unfortunately. And the biggest misleading it's impossible to represent the situation by using browser's devices toolbar.

I've just solved the issue like so (tested on PC, iOS and android browsers):

.your_class {
   height: 100vh,
   max-height: 100%, // <-- add the line
   ...some other props,
}

I hope it'll save your time.

2
  • I was using '100vh' but I realized that the content would clip at the bottom because the the content was still 100vh but the browser bar would push the content down. Height: 100% for me was the correct approach. Oct 12, 2022 at 15:25
  • I agree with the last comment, having the two heights gives a correct measurement, also it is widely compatible, unless lvh, svh & dvh.
    – Franco
    Mar 8, 2023 at 19:45
4

@nils explained it clearly.

What's next then?

I just went back to use relative 'classic' % (percentage) in CSS.

It's often more effort to implement something than it would be using vh, but at least, you have a pretty stable solution which works across different devices and browsers without strange UI glitches.

1
  • 3
    The height: 100% for banners still jumps on mobile browsers. I've been testing it on Android, and so far Chrome and Opera Mini gives 100% as the visible VP height, and does not change on scroll. Edge and Firefox change the 100% height, and repaint the view. Firefox is especially bad, with tearing, text rerendered, very obviously re-layout
    – Drenai
    May 2, 2018 at 9:16
3

The following code solved the problem (with jQuery).

var vhHeight = $("body").height();
var chromeNavbarHeight = vhHeight - window.innerHeight;
$('body').css({ height: window.innerHeight, marginTop: chromeNavbarHeight });

And the other elements use % as a unit to replace vh.

3

I have created two examples below:

  1. To showcase how height: 100vh as height can lead to scroll in mobile chrome browsers:

code : https://codesandbox.io/embed/mobile-viewport-100vh-issue-nxx8z?fontsize=14&hidenavigation=1&theme=dark

demo: https://nxx8z.csb.app/


  1. Solution using position: fixed to resolve the issue and with purely CSS:

code : https://codesandbox.io/s/mobile-viewport-100vh-issue-fix-forked-ypx5x?file=/index.html

demo : https://ypx5x.csb.app/

1
  • 1
    Amazing, simple and accurate solution, thanks :+1 Jun 13, 2022 at 0:56
2

As I am new, I can't comment on other answers.

If someone is looking for an answer to make this work (and can use javascript - as it seems to be required to make this work at the moment) this approach has worked pretty well for me and it accounts for mobile orientation change as well. I use Jquery for the example code but should be doable with vanillaJS.

-First, I use a script to detect if the device is touch or hover. Bare-bones example:

if ("ontouchstart" in document.documentElement) {
    document.body.classList.add('touch-device');

} else {
    document.body.classList.add('hover-device');
}

This adds class to the body element according to the device type (hover or touch) that can be used later for the height script.

-Next use this code to set height of the device on load and on orientation change:

if (jQuery('body').hasClass("touch-device")) {
//Loading height on touch-device
    function calcFullHeight() {
        jQuery('.hero-section').css("height", $(window).height());
    }

    (function($) {
        calcFullHeight();

        jQuery(window).on('orientationchange', function() {
            // 500ms timeout for getting the correct height after orientation change
            setTimeout(function() {
                calcFullHeight();
            }, 500);

        });
    })(jQuery);

} else {
    jQuery('.hero-section').css("height", "100vh");


}

-Timeout is set so that the device would calculate the new height correctly on orientation change. If there is no timeout, in my experience the height will not be correct. 500ms might be an overdo but has worked for me.

-100vh on hover-devices is a fallback if the browser overrides the CSS 100vh.

5
  • 2
    Touchstart is not supported on all browsers, and some non-mobile devices have it developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Events/touchstart
    – Drenai
    May 2, 2018 at 9:19
  • @Drenai Touchstart is supported on most mobile browsers. On desktop the support is a little less, IE, Opera and Safari are not supporting it. However the original question is aimed at mobile and not desktop. Which makes this a valid answer.
    – Paul
    Aug 11, 2018 at 19:18
  • Thanks for the comments! I have mainly used this tactics to overcome readjusting and jumpiness of the screen on some mobile browsers. If the browser doesn't support touchstart the fallback will be the css 100vh - if 100vh is not supported that's a different topic. If the desktop device happens to have touch support then the height will be calculated with javascript. We then lose the re-calculation on resize that 100vh provides, but it's not a fatal issue in general as there aren't orientation changes on desktop. Aug 13, 2018 at 6:35
  • Also, the height calculation could also be attached to resize event but then we can run into the same exact problem of readjusting and jumpiness on mobile devices. Therefore, I have found this tactics to be practical. Aug 13, 2018 at 6:38
  • @Drenai could you give an example of a better way to detect mobile browsers? Sure, screen size could be used but there are bigger tablets than laptops out there so I haven't find that perfect either. Aug 15, 2018 at 6:02
2

I just found a web app i designed has this issue with iPhones and iPads, and found an article suggesting to solve it using media queries targeted at specific Apple devices.

I don't know whether I can share the code from that article here, but the address is this: http://webdesignerwall.com/tutorials/css-fix-for-ios-vh-unit-bug

Quoting the article: "just match the element height with the device height using media queries that targets the older versions of iPhone and iPad resolution."

They added just 6 media queries to adapt full height elements, and it should work as it is fully CSS implemented.

Edit pending: I'm unable to test it right now, but I will come back and report my results.

1
  • 3
    I'm sorry I did not came back as promised. But after fiddling with the HTML and the CSS for much longer than I would have liked, I changed the design of my layout and found a way that worked "ok" for my needs, but was not a universal solution.
    – Jahaziel
    Aug 28, 2018 at 18:01
2

Do not use recommended approaches such as -webkit-fill-available.
I just spent all day rushing around to fix this "bug".

Add a class when your app is loaded with a browser with a "chin".

JavaScript

// Angular example but applicable for any JS solution
@HostBinding('class.browser-has-chin') browserHasChin: boolean = false;

public ngOnInit(): void {
    this.browserHasChin = this._isMobileSafari();
}

private _isMobileSafari() {
    return navigator.userAgent.match(/(iPod|iPhone|iPad)/) && navigator.userAgent.match(/AppleWebKit/) ? true : false;
}

CSS

.browser-has-chin {
  @media screen and (max-device-width: 767px){
    // offset with padding or something
  }
}

NOTES:
There are major issues with the -webkit-fill-available prop for cross-browser compatibility.

I was able to get it working in Chrome and iOS Safari to fix the chin/height calculation issue. However it broke Android Chrome and Firefox had bugs with it too.

It seems that -webkit-fill-available was rushed into webkit at some point and perhaps adopted haphazardly by Apple as a fix for chin/height calculation?

It relies on intrinsic sizing which is NOT safe to use yet.

2

React hooks solution with useEffect and useState

    function App() {
      const [vh, setVh] = useState(window.innerHeight);
    
      useEffect(() => {
        const updateVh = () => {
          setVh(window.innerHeight);
        };
    
        window.addEventListener('resize', updateVh);
    
        return () => window.removeEventListener('resize', updateVh);
      }, []);
    
      return (
        <div style={{ height: vh }}>
          {vh} px
        </div>
      );
}

Demo: https://jsfiddle.net/poooow/k570nfd9/

1
  • Great solution! With a little tweaking, this is working well in Next.JS too.
    – nonbeing
    Nov 10, 2022 at 7:39
1

The following worked for me:

html { height: 100vh; }

body {
  top: 0;
  left: 0;
  right: 0;
  bottom: 0;
  width: 100vw;
}

/* this is the container you want to take the visible viewport  */
/* make sure this is top-level in body */
#your-app-container {
  height: 100%;
}

The body will take the visible viewport height and #your-app-container with height: 100% will make that container take the visible viewport height.

1

The VH 100 does not work well on mobile as it does not factor in the iOS bar (or similar functionality on other platforms).

One solution that works well is to use JavaScript "window.innerHeight".

Simply assign the height of the element to this value e.g. $('.element-name').height(window.innerHeight);

Note: It may be useful to create a function in JS, so that the height can change when the screen is resized. However, I would suggest only calling the function when the width of the screen is changed, this way the element will not jump in height when the iOS bar disappears when the user scrolls down the page.

1
body {
   width: 100%;
   height: 100%
}

100% will adjust it self to the screen size but for some reason 100vh have a problem on adjusting when the screen changes so using the bottom 0 will be affected thus if you use 100vh or 100%

for example when the search bar is in view or not in mobile the 100% with change where as 100vh will stick on the first value of the screens height
0

Because it won't be fixed, you can do something like:

# html
<body>
  <div class="content">
    <!-- Your stuff here -->
  </div>
</body>

# css
.content {
  height: 80vh;
}

For me it was the fastest and more pure solution than playing with the JavaScript which could not work on many devices and browsers.

Just use proper value of vh which fits your needs.

0

Using vh on mobile devices is not going to work with 100vh, due to their design choices using the entire height of the device not including any address bars etc.

If you are looking for a layout including div heights proportionate to the true view height I use the following pure css solution:

:root {
  --devHeight: 86vh; //*This value changes
}

.div{
    height: calc(var(--devHeight)*0.10); //change multiplier to suit required height
}

You have two options for setting the viewport height, manually set the --devHeight to a height that works (but you will need to enter this value for each type of device you are coding for)

or

Use javascript to get the window height and then update --devheight on loading and refreshing the viewport (however this does require using javascript and is not a pure css solution)

Once you obtain your correct view height you can create multiple divs at an exact percentage of total viewport height by simply changing the multiplier in each div you assign the height to.

0.10 = 10% of view height 0.57 = 57% of view height

Hope this might help someone ;)

1
0

Here's a work around I used for my React app.

iPhone 11 Pro & iPhone Pro Max - 120px

iPhone 8 - 80px

max-height: calc(100vh - 120px);

It's a compromise but relatively simple fix

1
  • 2
    Having a hard coded value will cause unseen errors in the future.
    – Sanved
    May 4, 2022 at 3:16
0

A nice read about the problem and its possible solutions can be found in this blog post: Addressing the iOS Address Bar in 100vh Layouts

The solution I ended up in my React application is utilising the react-div-100vh library described in the post above.

0

Brave browser on iOS behaves differently (buggy?). It changes viewport height dynamically accordingly to showing/hiding address bar. It is kind of annoying because it changes page's layout dependent on vw/vh units.

Chrome and Safari is fine.

2
  • 1
    i think brave is the only browser that works correctly - the screen updates as the navbars dynamically hide - something apple admits was too much work for safari Jan 27, 2021 at 18:02
  • Well, it definitely looks odd on my website, because image width is dependent on its height which is dynamically changing because of those navbars. I would prefer Chrome/Safari behaviour for my site.
    – lukyer
    Jan 28, 2021 at 10:23
0

I solved it by putting the most outer div at position: absolute and then just setting the height to 100%:

CSS:

.outer {
    position: absolute;
    height: 100%;
}

HTML:

<div class="outer">
    <!-- content -->
</div>
0

It seems like CSS fix is unreliable and JS one works fine but the element is jumping when user opens the page.

I solved the issue using JS from other answers + fadeIn animation to hide jumping.

This won't fit all the use cases, but for some of them, like a button that has to be at the bottom, could be a good solution.

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