The question explains it pretty fully, but here's some more detail:
- I have a
div
with a fixed height. - Content is dynamically loaded via Ajax and appended to the
div
.
Added content is always positioned at the bottom of the div
.
2 pieces of content (no scrolling yet)
-------------------------div--
| |
| |
| |
| |
| some content (10:00 am) |
| |
| some content (10:03 am) |
------------------------------
Additional content pushes existing content up until the div
starts to scroll in the y-direction.
5 pieces of content (1 item scrolled)
-------------------------div--
| some content (10:03 am) ^|
| |
| some content (10:04 am) #|
| #|
| some content (10:07 am) #|
| #|
| some content (10:09 am) v|
------------------------------
Can this be done with CSS?
EDIT
Must work in Interne开发者_如何学Pythont Explorer!
I think you'll need to use Javascript to do the scrolling part by setting scrollTop
to the scrollHeight
after each append. My buddy Eric Pascarello posted a solution quite a while ago.
Getting it vertically positioned to the bottom is also somewhat of a challenge, but the following CSS ought to do it...
<div id="test">
<div class="bottom">
<p>Test1</p>
<p>Test2</p>
<p>Test3</p>
<p>Test4</p>
<p>Test5</p>
<p>Test6</p>
<p>Test7</p>
<p>Test8</p>
<p>Test9</p>
</div>
</div>
#test
{
background:green;
height:100px;
position:relative;
}
#test .bottom
{
bottom:0px;
max-height:100px;
overflow:auto;
position:absolute;
width:100%;
}
#test p
{
margin:0;
}
This code works for me in Firefox and Chrome. It only works in IE (7 and 8) under standards mode.
<style>
.outer {
width: 200px;
height: 200px;
position: relative;
border: 2px solid #ccc;
}
.inner {
width: 200px;
max-height: 200px;
position: absolute;
bottom: 0;
overflow: auto;
background: yellow;
}
</style>
<div class="outer">
<div class="inner">
text<br />
text<br />
text<br />
text<br />
</div>
</div>
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