We specify the margin-bottom of our <div> element. Then, we set the display of the <label> element to "inline-block" and give a fixed width. After that, set the text-align property to "right", and the labels will be aligned with the inputs on the right side.
Use the CSS text-align Property to Center a Form in HTML We can set the value to center to center the form. For example, apply the text-align property to the form tag in the style attribute, and set the property to center . Next, create input tags with the type text and then submit .
Use the text-align property in your CSS:
input {
text-align: right;
}
This will take effect in all the inputs of the page.
Otherwise, if you want to align the text of just one input, set the style inline:
<input type="text" style="text-align:right;"/>
Try this in your CSS:
input {
text-align: right;
}
To align the text in the center:
input {
text-align: center;
}
But, it should be left-aligned, as that is the default - and appears to be the most user friendly.
The accepted answer here is correct but I'd like to add a little info. If you are using a library / framework like bootstrap there may be built in classes for this. For example bootstrap uses the text-right
class. Use it like this:
<input type="text" class="text-right"/>
<input type="number" class="text-right"/>
As a note this works on other input types as well, like numeric as shown above.
If you aren't using a nice framework like bootstrap then you can make your own version of this helper class. Similar to other answers but we are not going to add it directly to the input class so it won't apply to every single input on your site or page, this might not be desired behavior. So this would create a nice easy css class to align things right without needing inline styling or affecting every single input box.
.text-right{
text-align: right;
}
Now you can use this class exactly the same as the inputs above with class="text-right"
. I know it isn't saving that many key strokes but it makes your code cleaner.
Here you go:
input[type=text] { text-align:right }
<form>
<input type="text" name="name" value="">
</form>
If you want to get it aligned to the right after the text looses focus you can try to use the direction modifier. This will show the right part of the text after loosing focus. e.g. useful if you want to show the file name in a large path.
input.rightAligned {
direction:ltr;
overflow:hidden;
}
input.rightAligned:not(:focus) {
direction:rtl;
text-align: left;
unicode-bidi: plaintext;
text-overflow: ellipsis;
}
<form>
<input type="text" class="rightAligned" name="name" value="">
</form>
The not selector is currently well supported : Browser support
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