CSS Basic

CSS HOME
CSS Introduction
CSS Syntax
CSS Id & Class
CSS How To

CSS Styling

Styling Backgrounds
Styling Text
Styling Fonts
Styling Links
Styling Lists
Styling Tables

CSS Box Model

CSS Box Model
CSS Border
CSS Outline
CSS Margin
CSS Padding

CSS Advanced

CSS Grouping/Nesting
CSS Dimension
CSS Display
CSS Positioning
CSS Floating
CSS Align
CSS Pseudo-class
CSS Pseudo-element
CSS Navigation Bar
CSS Image Gallery
CSS Image Opacity
CSS Image Sprites
CSS Media Types
CSS Attribute Selectors
CSS Don't
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CSS Examples

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CSS Quiz

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CSS References

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CSS Reference A to Z
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CSS Web Safe Fonts
CSS Units
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CSS Colornames

CSS Box Model

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The CSS Box Model

All HTML elements can be considered as boxes. In CSS, the term "box model" is used when talking about design and layout.

The CSS box model is essentially a box that wraps around HTML elements, and it consists of: margins, borders, padding, and the actual content.

The box model allows us to place a border around elements and space elements in relation to other elements.

The image below illustrates the box model:


Explanation of the different parts:

In order to set the width and height of an element correctly in all browsers, you need to know how the box model works.


Width and Height of an Element

Important: When you specify the width and height properties of an element with CSS, you are just setting the width and height of the content area. To know the full size of the element, you must also add the padding, border and margin.

The total width of the element in the example below is 300px:

width:250px;
padding:10px;
border:5px solid gray;
margin:10px;

Let's do the math:
250px (width)
+ 20px (left and right padding)
+ 10px (left and right border)
+ 20px (left and right margin)
= 300px

Imagine that you only had 250px of space. Let's make an element with a total width of 250px:

Example

width:220px;
padding:10px;
border:5px solid gray;
margin:0px;

Try it yourself »

The total width of an element should always be calculated like this:

Total element width = width + left padding + right padding + left border + right border + left margin + right margin

The total height of an element should always be calculated like this:

Total element height = height + top padding + bottom padding + top border + bottom border + top margin + bottom margin


Browsers Compatibility Issue

If you tested the previous example in Internet Explorer, you saw that the total width was not exactly 250px.

IE includes padding and border in the width, when the width property is set, unless a DOCTYPE is declared.

To fix this problem, just add a DOCTYPE to the code:

Example

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<style type="text/css">
div.ex
{
width:220px;
padding:10px;
border:5px solid gray;
margin:0px;
}
</style>
</head>

Try it yourself »

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