Chapter 7: CSS Margins
Inherited:
No
As you may have
guessed, the margin property declares the margin between an (X)HTML element and
the elements around it. The margin property can be set for the top, left, right
and bottom of an element. (see example below)
margin-top: length
percentage or auto;
margin-left: length
percentage or auto;
margin-right: length
percentage or auto;
margin-bottom: length
percentage or auto;
As you can also see
in the above example you have 3 choices of values for the margin property
·
length
·
percentage
·
auto
You can also
declare all the margins of an element in a single property as follows:
margin: 10px 10px 10px 10px;
If you declare all
4 values as I have above, the order is as follows:
1. top
2. right
3. bottom
4. left
If only one value
is declared, it sets the margin on all sides. (see below)
margin: 10px;
If you only declare
two or three values, the undeclared values are taken from the opposing side.
(see below)
margin: 10px 10px; /*
2 values */
margin: 10px 10px
10px; /* 3 values */
You can set the
margin property to negative values. If you do not declare the margin value of
an element, the margin is 0 (zero).
margin: -10px;
Elements like
paragraphs have default margins in some browsers, to combat this set the margin
to 0 (zero).
p {margin: 0;}
Note: You do not
have to add px (pixels) or whatever units you
use, if the value is 0 (zero).
You can see in the
example below, the elements for this site are set to be 20px (pixels) from the
body
Body
{
margin: 20px;
background: #eeeeee;
font-size: small;
font-family: Tahoma, Arial, "Trebuchet MS", Helvetica,
sansserif;
text-align: left;
}
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