I've recently been playing with Flexbox for the first time and, in general, it's absolutely amazing. I've encountered an issue recently however, where I cannot seem to give flex items that are wrapping any vertical spacing.
I've tried using:
align-content: space-between;
but this doesn't seem to do anything. From the reading I've done, this would only seem to work if my flex container is taller than the elements contained within (is this right?) If so, then would I not have to set a height for my flex-container, which would seem to defeat the purpose of using flexbox?
The only way I can think of to make this work would be to give bottom margin to the elements within, but again this seems to defeat the purpose.
Hopefully I'm missing something fairly obvious - here's a link to a codepen: http://codepen.io/lordchancellor/pen/pgMEPz
Also, here's my code:
HTML:
<div class="container"> <div class="col-sm-12"> <h1>Flexbox Wrapping</h1> <div class="flexContainer"> <div class="flexLabel">This is a flex label</div> <a class="btn btn-primary">Button 1</a> <a class="btn btn-warning">Button 2</a> <a class="btn btn-success">Button 3</a> </div> </div> </div>
CSS:
.flexContainer { display: flex; flex-wrap: wrap; align-items: center; align-content: space-between; justify-content: center; } .flexContainer .flexLabel { flex-basis: 150px; flex-shrink: 0; }
EDIT - Just going to add a little more detail here, as I'm not sure I'm putting it across well enough.
In my larger project, I have some block level elements that are arranged in a row using flexbox. However, there needs to be some responsiveness as the user may reduce the screen width. At this point, I want my elements to begin to stack (hence the wrap). However, as the elements begin to stack, they are all touching vertically, where I want there to be spacing.
It's beginning to look like top and bottom margins may be the only way to resolve this - however I was wondering if there was a flexbox-centric way to achieve this.
To set space between the flexbox you can use the flexbox property justify-content you can also visit all the property in that link. We can use the justify-content property of a flex container to set space between the flexbox.
Use the line-height property in CSS to do so. Browsers by default will create a certain amount of space between lines to ensure that the text is easily readable. For example, for 12-point type, a browser will place about 1 point of vertical space between lines.
justify-content: space-around , justify-content: space-evenly , justify-content: space-between . They provide spacing between elements and should help. Show activity on this post. If you are using bootstrap you need to add class.
I had a similar issue and I used the following hack to solve the issue.
/* add a negative top-margin to the flex container */ .flexContainer { /* ... your existing flex container styles here */ margin: -10px 0 0 0; } /* add a corresponding positive top margin to all flex items (all direct children of the flex container) */ .flexContainer > * { margin-top: 10px; }
For the top row of flex items the negative and positive margins cancel out, for the subsequent rows it adds the margin between the rows (in this case 10px
between rows).
It's less than elegant but it gets the job done.
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