I have an el开发者_StackOverflow中文版ement with display: inline-block, but it doesn't seem to accept margin-top. Is this because the element is still treated as an inline element?
If yes, does anyone have a workaround?
EDIT #1:
My CSS is quite simple:
.label {
background: #ffffff;
display: inline-block;
margin-top: -2px;
padding: 7px 7px 5px;
}
I ended up wrapping the content in another div and giving that a margin-top. But that causes a lot of extra markup and makes my code less clear.
EDIT #2:
margin-top
& margin-bottom
on inline-block
elements only seems to work with positive values.
you can also try replacing the negative margin with
.label{
position:relative;
top:-2px;
}
in addition to the rest of your .label
style
I used display: table
. It has the content-fitting properties of inline-block but also supports negative margins in a way that will shift the content following it up along with it. Probably not how you should be using it, but it works.
.label {
background: #ffffff;
display: table;
margin-top: -2px;
padding: 7px 7px 5px;
}
You can try vertical-align
like this:
.label {
background: #ffffff;
display: inline-block;
margin-top: -2px;
vertical-align: 2px;
padding: 7px 7px 5px;
}
I made an example on jsfiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/zmmbreeze/X6BjK/.
But vertical-align not work well on IE6/7. And there is a opera(11.64) rendering bug.
So I recommend to use position:relative
instead.
That is indeed the case. Instead of a margin, you could use a padding. Another solution would be to use a container div for the element. You make that div inline-block
, and make your current element a block inside that container. Then, you can give a margin to your element.
It would help if you got a concrete example, preferably in jsfiddle.net or so. It would help answers to be more specific too, instead of containing just general descriptions like mine here. ;)
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