This is not a bug. It is the desired behavior.
When you have a bunch of flex-children, and apply flex-basis: 0
and flex-grow: 1
to them, the following steps are being taken by the browser:
- Render text and other content the flex-children have
- Apply padding, borders and margins (taking the box-sizing into account)
- Starting with the smallest flex-child (because of
flex-basis: 0
) keep adding width to the items until the container is full (flex-grow: 1
).
That last step is where your problem lies. The browser doesn't force the elements to first be 0 pixels wide and all grow evenly. The browser simply starts with the smallest flex-child, giving it more width until it has grown as wide as the second smallest. At that point both of these flex-children will both grow evenly. And so forth, adding width until all space is distributed. This is also why box-sizing: border-box
seems to not working.
You can fix this by adding a container to each of the flex-items, which has the border-box part applied. See this Fiddle. The contents have been wrapped into another div, and the styles have been applied to it as well (except for the flex-specific properties, of course).