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display:none means that the element isn't rendered as part of the DOM, so it's not loaded until the display property changes to something else.

visibility:hidden loads the element, but does not show it.

Why does jQuery use display:none for its show/hide functions instead of switching between visibility:hidden and visibility:visible?

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4 Answers

up vote 43 down vote accepted

Because in display:none, the element, for all purposes, ceases to exist -- it doesn't occupy any space. However, in visibility:hidden, it's as if you had just added opacity:0 to the element -- it occupies the same amount of space but just acts invisible.

The jQuery creators probably thought the former would be a better fit for .hide().

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visibility: hidden makes an element invisible but does not remove it from the layout of the page. It leaves an empty box where the element was. display: none removes it from the layout so it doesn't take up any space on the page, which is usually want people want when they hide something.

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Visibility:hidden makes the element invisible in a way that it still uses space at the page. Display:none makes the element have no space and be completely gone, while it still exists in the DOM.

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Visibility just makes the element invisible, but it would still take up space on the screen.

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