Hmm I get your point. So when I just don't specify any width. It works
out exactly the same. So I believe this isn't a hack after all.
But my next question now is, will it always be parsed like this? If you
don't insert a width rule at all, will it always stretch the whole width?
- Jasper
Paul Novitski wrote:
At 01:20 PM 6/8/2005, Jasper Kuperus wrote:
When I was redesigning my homepage I found a CSS hack. Because I
couldn't find anything about this hack, it seemed to me that this
hack isn't known yet. So I named it after my homepage: The Curunir Hack.
http://shirmanos.student.utwente.nl/~jasper/index.php?id=5
Jasper, at first glance I thought this was very clever, but then I
realized that it only works when you're specifying {width: 100%;}.
Your hack {width: 100% -;} makes the width rule unparseable, so the
browser renders the div as though no width had been declared -- i.e.,
as wide as it can make it, filling its container, automatically
subtracting the margin, padding, border width, etc.
Rather than insert a hyphen to break the width rule, why not simply
eliminate the width rule entirely, and enclose your div in a container
of the desired width?
Regards,
Paul
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