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How to center an element horizontally and vertically

Tags:

html

css

I am trying to center my tabs content vertically, but when I add the CSS style display:inline-flex, the horizontal text-align disappears.

How can I make both text alignments x and y for each of my tabs?

* { box-sizing: border-box; }  #leftFrame {    background-color: green;    position: absolute;    left: 0;    right: 60%;    top: 0;    bottom: 0;  }  #leftFrame #tabs {    background-color: red;    position: absolute;    top: 0;    left: 0;    right: 0;    height: 25%;  }  #leftFrame #tabs div {    border: 2px solid black;    position: static;    float: left;    width: 50%;    height: 100%;    text-align: center;    display: inline-flex;    align-items: center;  }
<div id=leftFrame>    <div id=tabs>      <div>first</div>      <div>second</div>    </div>  </div>
like image 205
shuji Avatar asked Oct 19 '13 02:10

shuji


People also ask

How do you center text horizontally and vertically?

Select the text that you want to center. in the Page Setup group, and then click the Layout tab. In the Vertical alignment box, click Center. In the Apply to box, click Selected text, and then click OK.

How do you set the center of an element vertically?

For example, if you're trying to align something horizontally OR vertically, it's not that difficult. You can just set text-align to center for an inline element, and margin: 0 auto would do it for a block-level element.

How do you center an element?

Like last time, you must know the width and height of the element you want to center. Set the position property of the parent element to relative . Then set the child's position property to absolute , top to 50% , and left to 50% . This just centers the top left corner of the child element vertically and horizontally.


2 Answers

  • Approach 1 - transform translateX/translateY:

    Example Here / Full Screen Example

    In supported browsers (most of them), you can use top: 50%/left: 50% in combination with translateX(-50%) translateY(-50%) to dynamically vertically/horizontally center the element.

.container {      position: absolute;      top: 50%;      left: 50%;      -moz-transform: translateX(-50%) translateY(-50%);      -webkit-transform: translateX(-50%) translateY(-50%);      transform: translateX(-50%) translateY(-50%);  }
<div class="container">      <span>I'm vertically/horizontally centered!</span>  </div>

  • Approach 2 - Flexbox method:

    Example Here / Full Screen Example

    In supported browsers, set the display of the targeted element to flex and use align-items: center for vertical centering and justify-content: center for horizontal centering. Just don't forget to add vendor prefixes for additional browser support (see example).

html, body, .container {      height: 100%;  }    .container {      display: -webkit-flexbox;      display: -ms-flexbox;      display: -webkit-flex;      display: flex;      -webkit-flex-align: center;      -ms-flex-align: center;      -webkit-align-items: center;      align-items: center;      justify-content: center;  }
<div class="container">     <span>I'm vertically/horizontally centered!</span>  </div>

  • Approach 3 - table-cell/vertical-align: middle:

    Example Here / Full Screen Example

    In some cases, you will need to ensure that the html/body element's height is set to 100%.

    For vertical alignment, set the parent element's width/height to 100% and add display: table. Then for the child element, change the display to table-cell and add vertical-align: middle.

    For horizontal centering, you could either add text-align: center to center the text and any other inline children elements. Alternatively, you could use margin: 0 auto, assuming the element is block level.

html, body {      height: 100%;  }  .parent {      width: 100%;      height: 100%;      display: table;      text-align: center;  }  .parent > .child {      display: table-cell;      vertical-align: middle;  }
<section class="parent">      <div class="child">I'm vertically/horizontally centered!</div>  </section>

  • Approach 4 - Absolutely positioned 50% from the top with displacement:

    Example Here / Full Screen Example

    This approach assumes that the text has a known height - in this instance, 18px. Just absolutely position the element 50% from the top, relative to the parent element. Use a negative margin-top value that is half of the element's known height, in this case - -9px.

html, body, .container {      height: 100%;  }    .container {      position: relative;      text-align: center;  }    .container > p {      position: absolute;      top: 50%;      left: 0;      right: 0;      margin-top: -9px;  }
<div class="container">      <p>I'm vertically/horizontally centered!</p>  </div>

  • Approach 5 - The line-height method (Least flexible - not suggested):

    Example Here

    In some cases, the parent element will have a fixed height. For vertical centering, all you have to do is set a line-height value on the child element equal to the fixed height of the parent element.

    Though this solution will work in some cases, it's worth noting that it won't work when there are multiple lines of text - like this.

.parent {      height: 200px;      width: 400px;      background: lightgray;      text-align: center;  }    .parent > .child {      line-height: 200px;  }
<div class="parent">      <span class="child">I'm vertically/horizontally centered!</span>  </div>
like image 143
Josh Crozier Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 12:10

Josh Crozier


If CSS3 is an option (or you have a fallback) you can use transform:

.center {     right: 50%;     bottom: 50%;     transform: translate(50%,50%);     position: absolute; } 

Unlike the first approach above, you don't want to use left:50% with the negative translation because there's an overflow bug in IE9+. Utilize a positive right value and you won't see horizontal scrollbars.

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Mr Bullets Avatar answered Oct 07 '22 10:10

Mr Bullets