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I found that making a table with

<table style="padding-left: 100px; width: 200px">

makes the content only 100px wide. Further investigation revealed that Firefox has

table { -moz-box-sizing: border-box };

rule in its default stylesheet. Is there a reason for that? Are tables supposed to be sized this way according to the CSS standard?

2 Answers 2

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that's strange, i see that you are right, even though mozilla itself says the default value should be content-box. Bug? Seems your only choice have to reset this in your css.

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  • and here is the W3C candidate recommendation, also saying the default should be content-box: w3.org/TR/css3-ui/#box-sizing Nov 17, 2010 at 22:28
  • That's why Firefox's default stylesheet contains table { -moz-box-sizing: border-box } - to override the CSS default.
    – Alohci
    Nov 17, 2010 at 22:29
  • @Alohci, my question is why. I don't think it's unintentional -- you don't accidentally drop a line like that into a stylesheet. With Firefox striving to be compliant with the standard, I'm curious as to why they chose to defy it in this instance.
    – avakar
    Nov 17, 2010 at 22:41
  • "This is the box model used by Internet Explorer when the document is not in standards-compliant mode." from developer.mozilla.org/En/CSS/Box-sizing : that might be a clue. Nov 17, 2010 at 23:00
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    @Alohci, @avakar: thanks for the enlightment! i've learnt more about default UA stylesheets and their Bizantine reasoning. but hey, that's why we get the big bucks, no? imagine a world where CSS was intuitive, followed a single standard, and was reliable cross-platform; who would need css ninjas? Thank you, Browser vendors, for making my field an obscure, arcane and profitable one. Nov 18, 2010 at 1:22
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There really isn't any HTML or CSS standard that says how HTML should be styled by default. That's why reset stylesheets are so popular. Largely, each browser just goes with the prevailing behaviour of the other browsers. This would go back to the early Netscape and IE behaviour when tables were first introduced.

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    There is a de-facto standard in the form of the W3C recommendation: w3.org/TR/CSS2. I was referring to that document.
    – avakar
    Nov 17, 2010 at 22:24
  • I know the section you mean. That's not a requirement - it's an approximated description of what browsers do (or did). It's well known for not being terribly accurate.
    – Alohci
    Nov 17, 2010 at 22:31

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