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I have some containers and their children are only absolute / relatively positioned. How to set containers height so their children will be inside of them?

Here's the code:

HTML

<section id="foo">
    <header>Foo</header>
    <article>
        <div class="one"></div>
        <div class="two"></div>
    </article>
</section>    

<div style="clear:both">Clear won't do.</div>
<!-- I want to have a gap between sections here -->

<section id="bar">
    <header>bar</header>
    <article>
        <div class="one"></div><div></div>
        <div class="two"></div>
    </article>
</section>  

CSS

article {
    position: relative;
}

.one {
    position: absolute;
    top: 10px;
    left: 10px;
    background: red;
    width: 30px;
    height: 30px;
}

.two {
    position: absolute;
    top: 10px;
    right: 10px;
    background: blue;
    width: 30px;
    height: 30px;
}

Here's a jsfiddle. I want "bar" text to appear between 4 squares, not behind them.

http://jsfiddle.net/Ht9Qy/

Any easy fixes?

Note that I don't know height of these children, and I can't set height: xxx for containers.

share|improve this question
the only way (without JS) is to achieve this without absolute positionings. – E L Nov 24 '12 at 22:02

1 Answer

up vote 2 down vote accepted

If I understand what you're trying to do correctly, then I don't think this is possible with CSS while keeping the children absolutely positioned.

Absolutely positioned elements are completely removed from the document flow, and thus their dimensions cannot after the dimensions of their parents.

If you really had to achieve this affect while keeping the children as position: absolute, you could do so with JavaScript by finding the height of the absolutely positioned children after they have rendered, and using that to set the height of the parent.

Alternatively, just use float: left/float:right and margins to get the same positioning effect while keeping the children in the document flow, you can then use overflow: hidden on the parent (or any other clearfix technique) to cause its height to expand to that of its children.

article {
    position: relative;
    overflow: hidden;
}

.one {
    position: relative;
    float: left;
    margin-top: 10px;
    margin-left: 10px;
    background: red;
    width: 30px;
    height: 30px;
}

.two {
    position: relative;
    float: right;
    margin-top: 10px;
    margin-right: 10px;
    background: blue;
    width: 30px;
    height: 30px;
}
share|improve this answer
+1 One mustn't break a flow! The same layout can be and is achievable via relative positioning. – SmartK8 Nov 24 '12 at 22:00

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