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html - CSS fluid columns, fixed margins; the holy grail of holy grails

Update & Summary

I feel obligated to make this question clearer, now that there is a bounty attached.

(Also, I'm pretty sure this will be child's play when the calc() CSS3 unit value is supported, doing something like width: calc(25% - 5px); though we'll probably be browsing the internet in our minds by that point)

I'm working on a CSS framework for a few projects that share design requirements; namely a fluid 12 column layout. Using floated .column elements with percentage widths of (100% / 12) x col_size, this is reasonably easy. However, the issue comes with the addition of fixed margins (or any form of spacing) between columns.

My initial attempt used the fluid columns as described, with a .panel child nested in each. HTML/CSS snippet follows (reduced for brevity):

.column{
    float: left;
    display: inline-block;
}

.width-01{ width:  8.3333%; }
.width-02{ width: 16.6666%; }
.width-03{ width:      25%; }
/* etc */

.panel{
    width: 100%;
    padding: 5px;
    box-sizing: border-box; /* so padding doesn't increase width */
}
<div class="column width-02">
    <div class="panel">Width-02</div>
</div>
<div class="column width-03">
    <div class="panel">Width-03</div>
</div>
<div class="column width-02">
    <div class="panel">Width-02</div>
</div>
<div class="column width-05">
    <div class="panel">Width-05</div>
</div>

This snippet would produce a layout similar to that of the image below, however all .panel elements have 5px padding on all sides. I'm trying to make the content edge of the outside columns flush with the edge of the view-port (or parent container for that matter). Another approach would be to eliminate the .panel class altogether, and just go with columns:

.column{
    float: left;
    display: inline-block;
    padding-left: 10px;
    box-sizing: border-box;
}

.column:first-child{ padding-left: 0px; }

.width-01{ width:  8.3333%; }
.width-02{ width: 16.6666%; }
.width-03{ width:      25%; }
/* etc */
<div class="column width-02">Width-02</div>
<div class="column width-03">Width-03</div>
<div class="column width-02">Width-02</div>
<div class="column width-05">Width-05</div>

Again, this works well, producing results even closer to that of the image below, however now the (actual) problem is that the padding is eating into the width of the columns screwing up the width distribution. The :first-child column has 10 pixels (or whatever the margin size is) greater content area width than it's siblings.

This may seem innocuous, even unnoticeable; however there are a few instances where having exact (as exact as possible) width distribution between elements is either necessary, or would make things altogether easier.

And so, whether using padding, margin, or some combination thereof; is there any solution for fluid columns, fixed margins, with even distribution of gutter space that won't rob "marginal" (***haha*) content area from the adjacent columns?**


Original Question

Due to the simple lack of results in my searches and attempts, I've concluded this is impossible. If anywhere can yield an answer though, I'm certain it is here.

Is there any way, using pure CSS, to achieve a fluid width columned layout with fixed width margins?

Important note: This figure is only an example, and not the specific layout I'm looking to achieve. A given solution should permit any combination of adjacent columns, the total width distribution totaling 12 or less. Consider the popular 960 grid for reference.)

super_awesome_layout.css
Note: In a 12 column layout, the width distribution of the columns in the image are 2, 3, 2, and 5 respectively.

So far, I've resorted to a grid that, using percentages, nearly accomplishes this. The problem is, in order to achieve the margins, each column requires an additional child (I call them .panel) with:

width: 100%;
box-sizing: border-box;
padding: 10px;

This is, again nearly, fine; the issue is with this approach is that the first and last column have outer "margins" (10px) and the "margins" between each column are doubled (2 x 10px)

Certainly, with the inclusion of the new CSS3 calc() value type, this could be solved much more easily. Something in the direction of:

.width-12 > .panel{ width: 100%; }
.width-09 > .panel{
    width: calc(75% - 10px);
    margin: ...;
}

I've got some Javascript fixes, I've hacked out some stuff that "works", but I'm on a quest. Hopefully the holiest of grails exists.

The following solution, and the one @avall provided (although certainly a good choice on simplifying) unfortunately aren't what I'm looking for. The main issue being, the margins are not distributed evenly among columns.

The only way I can see this working is reducing the .panel padding to 5px and something like:

.column:first-child > .panel {
    padding-left: 0px;
}

.column:last-child > .panel {
    padding-right: 0px;
}

/* not necessary? in any case, haven't tested */
.column:only-child > .panel {
    padding-right: 0px;
    padding-left: 0px;
}

This solution is not acceptable, only because IE8 fails to recognize the :last-child (and for that matter :only-child) pseudo selectors.

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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by (71.8m points)

I finally figured out. After into the hundreds of hours wasted on and off over the last decade (though I'm relying on some css that wouldn't have worked year ago anyway). I solved it without any gotchas. and in IE8+.

Please prepare the 2001: A Space Odyssey Music because I'm landing this boat.

The genius and trick to this method is in using inline-block elements and then using word-spacing to counterbalance using a negative right margin. A negative right margin on it's own will pull elements together, allowing you to have 100% width set and still fit things in between, but leave the elements overlapping. Setting negative margin on the parent just undoes the child margin in regards to the effect on interacting with total width (the magic "100% width" mark we're trying to hit"). Padding only serves to increase the size of the element its on and is useless with regards to counter-acting margin. It is often used with box-sizing in the jury rigged solutions to this problem, at the expense of losing the ability to use padding at all otherwise (and margin) and likely requiring more wrapper elements.

word-spacing provides the magical "third way" to add or remove horizontal distance between two elements, provided they are inline-block, since they will be counted as a single "word" in that case, and any whitespace between will collpapse down to the one single controllable "word-spacing" property. Aside from this trick I'm not aware of another way to get this 100% result.

I humbly present the ultimate answer to the fixed-gutters flex-columns problem. I hereby name my solution "the omega maneuver". It comes with the ability to handle arbitrary mixed width columns (adding up to 100% total width exactly or slightly less for rounding), any gutter size, any predefined amount of columns in width, handles arbitrary amounts of rows with auto-wrapping, and uses inline-block elements so therefore provides the vertical-alignment options that come with inline-block, AND it doesn't require any extra markup and only requires a single class declaration on the container (not counting defining column widths). I think the code speaks for itself. Here's the code implementation for 2-6 columns using 10px gutters and bonus helper classes for percentages.

EDIT: interesting conundrum. I've managed to get two slightly different versions; one for mozilla and ie8+, the other for webkit. It seems the word-spacing trick doesn't work in webkit, and I don't know why the other version works in webkit but not ie8+/mozilla. Combining both gets you coverage over everything and I'm willing to bet there's a way to unify this tactic or something very similar to work around the issue.

EDIT2: Mostly got it! Magical text-align: justify gets WebKit almost there with the word-spacing one. The spacing just seems a tiny bit off, like a matter of pixels on the right and maybe one extra in the gutters. But it's usable and it seems more reliable about keeping the columns than anything I've used before. It never chops down to fewer columns, it'll compress until the browser gets a horizontal scrollbar.

Edit3: Got it a little close to perfect. Setting the font-size to 0 normalizes most of the remaining issues with spacing that's off. Just gotta fix IE9 now which collapses it if it font is size 0.

EDIT4: Got the answer to IE from some other fluid width posts: -ms-text-justify: distribute-all-lines. Tested in IE8-10.

/* The Omega Maneuver */
[class*=cols] { text-align: justify; padding-left: 10px; font-size: 0;
             -ms-text-justify: distribute-all-lines; } 

 [class*=cols]>* { display: inline-block; text-align: left; font-size: 13px;
                word-spacing: normal; vertical-align: top;
                -webkit-box-sizing: border-box;
                   -moz-box-sizing: border-box;
                        box-sizing: border-box; }

.cols2 { word-spacing: 20px; padding-right: 20px; }
.cols3 { word-spacing: 30px; padding-right: 30px; }
.cols4 { word-spacing: 40px; padding-right: 40px; }
.cols5 { word-spacing: 50px; padding-right: 50px; }
.cols6 { word-spacing: 60px; padding-right: 60px; }

  .cols2 > * { margin-right: -10px; }
  .cols3 > * { margin-right: -20px; }
  .cols4 > * { margin-right: -30px; }
  .cols5 > * { margin-right: -40px; }
  .cols6 > * { margin-right: -50px; }

Some helpers:

.?, .?s >* { width: 12.50%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 16.66%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 20.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 25.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 33.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 37.50%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 40.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 50.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 60.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 62.50%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 66.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 75.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 80.00%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 83.33%; }
.?, .?s >* { width: 87.50%; }
.blarg-five-twelfs { width: 41.66%; }

You can witness my magnum opus in action amongst a field of glory here: http://jsfiddle.net/xg7nB/15/

<div class="cols4">
    <div class="?">This is my magnum opus</div>
    <div class="?">I finally beat css</div>
    <div class="?">? ? ? ? ?</div>
    <div class="blarg-five-twelfs">I BEAT IT FOREVER</div>
</div>

The absolute minimal implementation, using as an example 4 equal width (25%) width cols and 10px gutters is like so:

.fourEqualCols { word-spacing: 40px; padding: 0 40px 0 10px;
                 text-align: justify; font-size: 0;
                 -ms-text-justify: distribute-all-lines; }

.fourEqualCols>* { margin-right: -30px; width: 25%;
                   display: inline-block; word-spacing: normal;
                   text-align: left; font-size: 13px; }


<div class="fourEqualCols ">
  <div>GLORIOUSLY CLEAN MARKUP</div>
  <div>I hate extra markup and excessive class props</div>
  <div>Naked code</div>
  <div>get intimate</div>
</div>

Soooo this code essentially replaces pretty much any existing grid framework right? If you can arbitrarily set gutters and then just make sets of columns that hit 100% width, that's strictly superior to most/all grid frameworks in fact isn't it? If you're not developing for IE7 anymore like a lot of us then that combined with box-sizing: border-box renders padding and border also a non-issue.

Edit: oh right you wanted to be flush with the sides of the container. No problem with this, I had to specifically add side gutters so we can just change some values by 10 and get rid of the padding and voila. http://jsfiddle.net/bTty3/

[class^=cols] { text-align: justify; font-size: 0;
             -ms-text-justify: distribute-all-lines; } 

 [class^=cols] >* { display: inline-block; text-align: left; font-size: 13px;
                word-spacing: normal; vertical-align: top;
                -webkit-box-sizing: border-box;
                   -moz-box-sizing: border-box;
                        box-sizing: border-box; }

.cols2 { word-spacing: 20px; padding-right: 10px; }
.cols3 { word-spacing: 30px; padding-right: 20px; }
.cols4 { word-spacing: 40px; padding-right: 30px; }
.cols5 { word-spacing: 50px; padding-right: 40px; }
.cols6 { word-spacing: 60px; padding-right: 50px; }
 .cols2 >* { margin-right: 0 }
 .cols2 >* { margin-right: -10px; }
 .cols3 >* { margin-right: -20px; }
 .cols4 >* { margin-right: -30px; }
 .cols5 >* { margin-right: -40px; }
 .cols6 >* { margin-right: -50px; }

Same html

<div class="cols4">
    <div class="?">This is my magnum opus</div>
    <div class="?">I finally beat css</div>
    <div class="?">? ? ? ? ?</div>
    <div class="blarg-five-twelfs">I BEAT IT FOREVER</div>
</div>

I beat CSS here's your proof


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