I have a div
tag with width
set to 800 pixels. When the browser width is greater than 800 pixels, it shouldn't stretch the div
, but it should bring it to the middle of the page.
<body>
<div style="width:800px; margin:0 auto;">
centered content
</div>
</body>
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43This is correct for demo purposes, but obviously not using inline styles in the final markup – gonzohunter Jun 5 '09 at 10:36
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62Just make sure to apply 'text-align: center' to the <body> or else IE6 will not center the div. Then add text-align: left; to your div. – avdgaag Jun 5 '09 at 15:08
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2be sure to check HTML mode for IE6 or 7. If you use anything other than 4.01 strict you may have problems. Most of the time text-align works as avdgaag says. – bartosz.r Oct 6 '11 at 10:05
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1@rybo111 Then you don't need to. The idea is that 'left' is the default for text-align, and if it isn't restored then the entire div will inherit 'text-align: center'. – jkdev Oct 8 '15 at 23:54
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4
position: absolute
and then top:50%
and left:50%
places the top edge at the vertical center of the screen, and the left edge at the horizontal center, then by adding margin-top
to the negative of the height of the div, i.e., -100 shifts it above by 100 and similarly for margin-left
. This gets the div
exactly in the center of the page.
#outPopUp {
position: absolute;
width: 300px;
height: 200px;
z-index: 15;
top: 50%;
left: 50%;
margin: -100px 0 0 -150px;
background: red;
}
<div id="outPopUp"></div>
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12Thx, your answer is the one and only cross-browser solution, it should be accepted...worth mentioning that it also works with "position:relative" if you have other divs on top and below (in this case only "left:50%" and "margin:0px -150px;" are important). – Marcus Nov 22 '13 at 14:51
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3position: fixed worked for me and might work best for anyone else where the added div is in some tree of absolute/relative divs already. – ʍǝɥʇɐɯ May 28 '14 at 14:04
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This could be in percentage as well.
width:90%;left:50%;margin-left:45%;
– iMatoria Sep 25 '15 at 3:30 -
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4using
transform: translateX(-50%)
is more versatile than using a negative margin as a way to account for the div's width. same applies for translateY and height – mwag Dec 7 '17 at 21:39
Modern Flexbox solution is the way to go in/from 2015. justify-content: center
is used for the parent element to align the content to the center of it.
HTML
<div class="container">
<div class="center">Center</div>
</div>
CSS
.container {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
.center {
width: 800px;
}
Output
.container {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
.center {
width: 800px;
background: #5F85DB;
color: #fff;
font-weight: bold;
font-family: Tahoma;
}
<div class="container">
<div class="center">Centered div with left aligned text.</div>
</div>
Do you mean that you want to center it vertically or horizontally? You said you specified the
height
to 800 pixels, and wanted the div not to stretch when thewidth
was greater than that...To center horizontally, you can use the
margin: auto;
attribute in CSS. Also, you'll have to make sure that thebody
andhtml
elements don't have any margin or padding:
html, body { margin: 0; padding: 0; }
#centeredDiv { margin-right: auto; margin-left: auto; width: 800px; }
<div></div>
div {
display: table;
margin-right: auto;
margin-left: auto;
}
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3this is what i needed. thanks. using the more upvoted answers would only help to position a popup. this answer helps position any div in the center horizontally. – dresh Jan 5 '17 at 12:48
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Funny this is the simplest answer and the only one that is actually correct. Should get more votes. – A. Kali Oct 2 at 17:13
To make it also work correctly in Internet Explorer 6 you have to do it as follows:
HTML
<body>
<div class="centered">
centered content
</div>
</body>
CSS
body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
text-align: center; /* !!! */
}
.centered {
margin: 0 auto;
text-align: left;
width: 800px;
}
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Or go out from quircks mode and use a strict mode, it helps a lot, when you want to use features like hover, auto-margins and many others. – bartosz.r Oct 6 '11 at 10:06
You can also use it like this:
<div style="width: 60%; margin: 0px auto;">
Your contents here...
</div>
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This answer is useful when you don't want to set the width to a fix pixels of 800px. The size can be 80% and it will cover 80% of the screen size available, which seems more dynamic. – Kamal Soni Mar 7 '17 at 23:19
Div centered vertically and horizontally inside the parent without fixing the content size
Here on this page is a nice overview with several solutions, too much code to share here, but it shows what is possible...
Personally I like this solution with the famous transform translate -50% trick the most. It works well for both fixed (% or px) and undefined height and width of your element.
The code is as simple as:
HTML:
<div class="center"><div>
CSS:
.center {
position: absolute;
left: 50%;
top: 50%;
transform: translate(-50%, -50%);
-ms-transform: translate(-50%, -50%); /* for IE 9 */
-webkit-transform: translate(-50%, -50%); /* for Safari */
/* optional size in px or %: */
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
}
Here a fiddle that shows that it works
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The second link is effectively broken ("This Web page is parked for FREE..."). – Peter Mortensen Mar 24 at 11:07
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@PeterMortensen I improved my answer by replacing the link with a new one with similar solution and by adding the code to the answer to prevent such problems in the future (link only answers are no good). Also removed the link to the first solution because it wasn't that great actually. – Wilt Mar 24 at 16:19
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This worked for me. It also works when you do not specify width of div in css and when you also decide to specify the width in css. Thank you. – Joseph Apr 14 at 16:12
This can be easily achieved via flex container.
.container{
width: 100%;
display: flex;
height: 100vh;
justify-content: center;
}
.item{
align-self: center;
}
Simply use the center
tag just after the body
tag, and end the center
tag just before body
ends:
<body>
<center>
... Your code here ...
</center>
</body>
This worked for me with all the browsers I have tried.
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37
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7It may have been depreciated, but it's still the simplest solution and works on all browsers. – Bill Masters Aug 16 '15 at 2:41
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@BillMasters May be it is working now but at some time in future it will become obsolete. – Mohammad Usman Dec 15 '16 at 7:46
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2@MohammadUsman I think this tag would survive longer than some fancy ES6 module npm dependency shit. – est Aug 30 '17 at 9:02
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Add this class to the div you want centered (which should have a set width):
.marginAutoLR
{
margin-right:auto;
margin-left:auto;
}
Or, add the margin stuff to your div class, like this:
.divClass
{
width:300px;
margin-right:auto;
margin-left:auto;
}
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3
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@ChrisAplin This works for me fine as is. Did you downvote because of this? Not necessary. Someone downvoted this for no apparent reason this is working fine for me I use it everywhere. – Taylor Brown Feb 26 '16 at 14:50
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1
Use the CSS flex property: http://jsfiddle.net/cytr/j7SEa/6/show/
body { /* Centered */
display: box;
flex-align: center;
flex-pack: center;
}
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1
-
Some other pre-existing setups from older code that will prevent div page centering L&R are:
- Other classes hidden in external stylesheet links.
- Other classes embedded in something like an
img
(like for older external CSS print format controls). - Legend code with IDs and/or CLASSES will conflict with a named
div
class.
Centering without specifying div width:
body {
text-align: center;
}
body * {
text-align: initial;
}
body div {
display: inline-block;
}
This is something like <center>
tag does, except:
- all direct inline childs elements (eg.
<h1>
) of<center>
will also positioned to center - inline-block element can have different size (comapred to
display:block
setting) according to browser defaults
If you have some regular content, and not only one line of text, the only possible reason I know is to calculate margin.
Here is an example:
HTML
<div id="supercontainer">
<div id="middlecontainer">
<div class="common" id="first">first</div>
<div id="container">
<div class="common" id="second">second</div>
<div class="common" id="third">third</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
CSS
body {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
.common {
border: 1px solid black;
}
#supercontainer {
width: 1200px;
background: aqua;
float: left;
}
#middlecontainer {
float: left;
width: 104px;
margin: 0 549px;
}
#container {
float: left;
}
#first {
background: red;
height: 102px;
width: 50px;
float: left;
}
#second {
background: green;
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
}
#third {
background: yellow;
height: 50px;
width: 50px;
}
So, #supercontainer
is your "whole page"
and its width
is 1200px
.
#middlecontainer
is div
with content of your site; it's width
102px
. In case the width
of content is known, you need to divide the page's size to 2, and subtract half of content's width
from the result:
1200 / 2 - (102 / 2) = 549;
Yes, I'm also seeing that this is der grosse fail of CSS.
Use justify-content
and align-items
to horizontally and vertically align a div
https://developer.mozilla.org/de/docs/Web/CSS/justify-content https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/CSS/align-items
html,
body,
.container {
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
.container {
display: flex;
align-items: center;
justify-content: center;
}
.mydiv {
width: 80px;
}
<div class="container">
<div class="mydiv">h & v aligned</div>
</div>
body, html {
display: table;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
.container {
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: middle;
}
.container .box {
width: 100px;
height: 100px;
background: red;
margin: 0 auto;
}
"width:100%" for the "body" tag is only for an example. In a real project you may remove this property.
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I recommend Andrei's solution. Working fine in center with all aspects. – Super Model Jul 14 '17 at 19:49
Simple http://jsfiddle.net/8pd4qx5r/
html {
display: table;
height: 100%;
width: 100%;
}
body {
display: table-cell;
vertical-align: middle;
}
.content {
margin: 0 auto;
width: 260px;
text-align: center;
background: pink;
}
Use the below code for centering the div box:
.box-content{
margin: auto;
top: 0;
right: 0;
bottom: 0;
left: 0;
position: absolute;
width: 800px;
height: 100px;
background-color: green;
}
<div class="box-content">
</div>
This also works in Internet Explorer, but auto margins do not.
.centered {
position: absolute;
display: inline-block;
left: -500px;
width: 1000px;
margin: 0 50%;
}
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I tried it out: jsfiddle.net/nqEar/show On my monitor (1920px) on Chrome 22 it is not centered. – surfmuggle Oct 28 '12 at 7:54
<parent>
<child>
</child>
</parent>
parent {
position: relative
}
child {
position: absolute,
left: 50%,
transform: translateX(-50%)
}
If your center content is deep inside other divs then only margin can save you. Nothing else. I face it always when not using a framework like Bootstrap.
In my case, the phone screen size is unknown, and here is what I did.
HTML
<div class="loadingImg"></div>
CSS
.loadingImg{
position: fixed;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
z-index: 9999999;
border: 0;
background: url('../images/loading.gif') no-repeat center;
background-size: 50px 50px;
display: block;
margin: 0 auto;
-webkit-border-radius: 50px;
border-radius: 50px;
}
JavaScript (before you need to show this DIV)
$(".loadingImg").css("height",$(document).height());
$(".loadingImg").css("width",$(document).width());
$(".loadingImg").show();
.middle {
margin:0 auto;
text-align: center;
}
/* it brings div to center */
<body>
<div style=" display: table; margin: 250 auto;">
In center
</div>
</body>
If you want to change the vertical position, change the value of 250 and you can arrange the content as per your need. There is no need to give the width and other parameters.
For some reason, none of the previous answers worked for me really. This is what worked for me and it works across browsers as well:
.center {
text-align: center;
height: 100%;
/* Safari, Opera, and Chrome */
display: -webkit-box;
-webkit-box-pack: center;
-webkit-box-align: center;
/* Firefox */
display: -moz-box;
-moz-box-pack: center;
-moz-box-align: center;
/* Internet Explorer 10 */
display: -ms-flexbox;
-ms-flex-pack: center;
-ms-flex-align: center;
}
- Get the width of the screen.
- Then make margin left 25%
- Make margin right 25%
In this way the content of your container will sit in the middle.
Example: suppose that container width = 800px;
<div class='container' width='device-width' id='updatedContent'>
<p id='myContent'></p>
<contents></contents>
<contents></contents>
</div>
if ($("#myContent").parent === $("updatedContent"))
{
$("#myContent").css({
'left': '-(device-width/0.25)px';
'right': '-(device-width/0.225)px';
});
}