Assume you need to present a list of colors to the user. The colors must be displayed in a list with a fixed height, with each color occupying an equal fraction of that height.
Here is what it should look like with four colors, a list height of 90 pixels and a thick border around:
The image above is rendered in Firefox 3.6.13 from the follow source:
<ul style="height: 90px; border: 5px solid black; padding: 0;">
<li style="height: 25%; background: red;">
<li style="height: 25%; background: blue;">
<li style="height: 25%; background: yellow;">
<li style="height: 25%; background: green;">
</ul>
This is all fine. The list is indeed 90 pixels heigh – within the borders – and each color gets an (seemingly) equal share of this space. Now, let's render the same HTML/CSS in Safari or Chrome:
Notice the narrow white row between the green row and the border. There is a pretty simply explanation for what we are seeing here: 0.25 × 90 = 22.5
WebKit in Safari and Chrome does not really like non-integer pixel heights and drops the decimal. With four rows of height 22 we get 2 pixels of nothing in the bottom of the list: 90 - 4 × 22 = 2
In the context of a static HTML file, we could easily set the height of the elements to 23, 22, 23, 23 pixels respectively, and the list would show up fine in any browser. If, on the other hand, the colors are loaded from a database and the count varies with each request, a more flexible solution is needed.
I know how to solve this by computing and setting an integer value height on each row onload
using Javascript, and I will post this solution if nothing else shows up. I would, however, prefer a purely CSS-based solution to the problem. Can you think of one?
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