My biggest gripe with HTML is that line breaks add a tiny bit of space between elements. (jsFiddle.)
This can screw up layouts where child elements are sized to exactly fit their parents.
I read somewhere that you can remove this implicit padding - while still keeping the code somewhat legible - by using comments like this:
&开发者_高级运维lt;!--
--><div>Foo</div><!--
--><div>Bar</div><!--
--><div>And so on...</div><!--
-->
This works, but I feel like there has to be a better solution. What other ways are there to work around the line-break padding?
That isn't "a little bit of space", but literally a space character. You are using display: inline-block
to align your elements horizonally, and that's how "inline" works.
If you want to use inline-block
you need to remove the white space between the elements as you are doing it.
Otherwise you can use one of the other methods to horizontally align, for example floating or display: table-cell
.
A solution would be to use some HTML compressor before publishing your pages to remove unneeded space from your markup, like in this example.
From what I've seen though, they tend to leave always one space at least, because they don't know if you really wanted that space or not, and since browsers considers only the first space if there are more than one, compressors leave one space there.
You should try font-size:0px; line-height:0px for outer div.
Something like this:
<div class="outer">
<div class="inner">123</div>
<div class="inner">34556</div>
</div>
<style>
.outer {
font-size:0px;
line-height:0px;
}
.inner {
font-size:14px;
line-height:16px;
display:inline-block;
}
</style>
This is because you use display: inline-block;
for the div
elements.
Block elements strip white space around them, inline elements don't.
Try float: left;
instead.
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