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
CSS Summary

CSS Examples

CSS Examples

CSS Quiz

CSS Quiz
CSS Certificate

CSS References

CSS Reference
CSS Reference A to Z
CSS Reference Aural
CSS Web Safe Fonts
CSS Units
CSS Colors
CSS Colorvalues
CSS Colornames

CSS Display and Visibility

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The display property specifies if/how an element is displayed, and the visibility property specifies if an element should be visible or hidden.

Box 1

Box 2
Box 3

Hiding an Element - display:none or visibility:hidden

Hiding an element can be done by setting the display property to "none" or the visibility property to "hidden". However, notice that these two methods produce different results:

visibility:hidden hides an element, but it will still take up the same space as before. The element will be hidden, but still affect the layout.

Example

h1.hidden {visibility:hidden;}

Try it yourself »

display:none hides an element, and it will not take up any space. The element will be hidden, and the page will be displayed as the element is not there:

Example

h1.hidden {display:none;}

Try it yourself »


CSS Display - Block and Inline Elements

A block element is an element that takes up the full width available, and has a line break before and after it.

Examples of block elements:

An inline element only takes up as much width as necessary, and does not force line breaks.

Examples of inline elements:


Changing How an Element is Displayed

Changing an inline element to a block element, or vice versa, can be useful for making the page look a specific way, and still follow web standards.

The following example displays list items as inline elements:

Example

li {display:inline;}

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The following example displays span elements as block elements:

Example

span {display:block;}

Try it yourself »

Note: Changing the display type of an element changes only how the element is displayed, NOT what kind of element it is. For example: An inline element set to display:block is not allowed to have a block element nested inside of it.


Examples

More Examples

How to display an element as an inline element.
This example demonstrates how to display an element as an inline element.

How to display an element as a block element
This example demonstrates how to display an element as a block element.

How to make a table element collapse
This example demonstrates how to make a table element collapse.



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