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html - Why does the CSS min-width attribute not force a div to have the specified minimum width?

<html>
    <head>
        <style type="text/css">
            div {
                border:1px solid #000;
                min-width: 50%;
            }
        </style>
    </head>
    <body>
        <div>This is some text. </div>
    </body>
</html>

I believe the div should be 50 percent of the page, unless, for some reason, the text inside the div makes it larger. However, the border around the div stretches across the entire page width. This occurs in both IE and Firefox.

Suggestions?

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I believe the div should be 50 percent of the page, unless, for some reason, the text inside the div makes it larger.

min-width does not set a minimum starting width from which your block will grow; rather it limits how far the block can shrink.

In min-width: 50%;, the 50% is in reference to the containing block. I've never used percentages with min-width, but I find it can be useful with other units. For example if I have a block (like a column of text) that I want to be full width, but I don't ever want it to go below a minimum width, I could use something like {width: 100%; min-width: 250px;}.

Note the caveats on IE support mentioned by others.


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