Floating elements (floats) CSS Tutorial

  • An element can be floated to the right or to left by using the property float. That is to say that the box with its contents either floats to the right or to the left in a document (or the containing box) (see lesson 9 for a description of the Box model). The following figure illustrates the principle:
    Floating elements (floats)
    If we for example would like to have a text wrapping around a picture, the result would be like this:
    Floating elements (floats)

    How is it done?

    The HTML code for the example above, look as follows:
     
     <div id="picture">
      <img src="bill.jpg" alt="Bill Gates">
     </div>
    
     <p>causas naturales et antecedentes, 
     idciro etiam nostrarum voluntatum...</p>
     
    
    To get the picture floating to the left and the text to surround it, you only have to define the width of the box which surrounds the picture and thereafter set the property float to left:
     
     #picture {
      float:left;
      width: 100px;
     }
     
    

    Another example: columns

    Floats can also be used for columns in a document. To create the columns, you simply have to structure the desired columns in the HTML-code with<div> as follows:
     
     <div id="column1">
      <p>Haec disserens qua de re agatur
      et in quo causa consistat non videt...</p>
     </div>
    
     <div id="column2">
      <p>causas naturales et antecedentes, 
      idciro etiam nostrarum voluntatum...</p>
     </div>
    
     <div id="column3">
      <p>nam nihil esset in nostra 
      potestate si res ita se haberet...</p>
     </div>
     
    
    Now the desired width of the columns is set to e.g. 33%, and then you simply float each column to the left by defining the property float:
     
     #column1 {
      float:left;
      width: 33%;
     }
    
     #column2 {
      float:left;
      width: 33%;
     }
    
     #column3 {
      float:left;
      width: 33%;
     }
     
    
    float can be set as either leftright or none.

    The property clear

    The clear property is used to control how the subsequent elements of floated elements in a document shall behave.
    By default, the subsequent elements are moved up to fill the available space which will be freed when a box is floated to a side. Look at the example above wherein the text is automatically moved up beside the picture of Bill Gates.
    The property clear can assume the values leftrightboth or none. The principle is, if clear, for example, is set to both for a box, the top margin border of this box will always be under the lower margin border for possible floating boxes coming from above.
     
     <div id="picture">
      <img src="bill.jpg" alt="Bill Gates">
     </div>
    
     <h1>Bill Gates</h1>
    
     <p class="floatstop">causas naturales et antecedentes, 
     idciro etiam nostrarum voluntatum...</p>
     
    
    To avoid the text from floating up next to the picture, we can add the following to our CSS:
     
     #picture {
      float:left;
      width: 100px;
     }
    
     .floatstop {
      clear:both;
     }
     
    

    Summary

    Floats are useful in many situations and will often be used together with positioning. In the next lesson we will take a closer look at how to position a box, either relative or absolute.

    Article Source:http://www.techstarcle.com


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