SOLVED: by @g6d3np81@kbin.social using columns
property
TL;DR: I want to achieve this behavior for the menu layout, but all I can get is this; note the different menu options order.
Two days ago I asked for help for implementing the current behavior without hardcoding the menu height for each resolution step, and there were two suggestions to try display: grid
. It looked promising and after reading some documentation I was able to get something very close to what I’m looking for.
The only difference being that I want the chapters to be sorted vertically (as in the current version), but what I got sorts the chapters horizontally.
Here it is (what I think is) the relevant code:
#menu ul {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr;
grid-auto-flow: row dense;
}
Sorry, I don’t have the display: grid
version online.
I did a quick search for display grid multiple columns vertical sort and saw this StackOverflow post: CSS Grid vertical columns with infinite rows which, if I understand correctly, says it’s not possible. But I’m pretty sure I’m not understanding it correctly.
Any help will be welcome, thanks!
EDIT: I also tried grid-audto-flow: column
(as suggested here) but it just renders a single row. Probably because I’m missing something…
#menu ul {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr;
grid-auto-flow: column;
}
EDIT-2: I was told that for grid-audto-flow: column
to work I need to specify the numbers of columns. If I understand correctly, then that doesn’t really help. The original issue is that I need to edit the CSS file every time a new chapter is added. Which would be the same if I have to hardcode the number of rows.
I mean, it’s a bit cleaner to hardcode the number of rows than the height in pixels, but I was looking for a solution that doesn’t require magic numbers in the CSS.
(Different account, same user)
EDIT: I got it working, thank you very much!
Original message:
For some reason, adding a left/right margin to
ul li
made it behave like the previous lnked image, I don’t understand why, but removing the margin fixes it.Generally you don’t need anything for child element, except in rare case, which you have seen before a fix…
Columns usually try to balance every columns to have same height, and last column have least items.
EDIT: In your case, <li> having a margin-top, which got clipped when new column starts. I don’t know if there is a fix for this but I would use padding instead.
CSS is chaotic, dude.
ul { /* reset */ margin: 0; padding: 16px; columns: 2; /* box-sizing: border-box; */ } @media screen and (min-width: 640px) { ul { columns: 3; } } @media screen and (min-width: 960px) { ul { columns: 4; } } ul li { list-style-type: none; padding: 2px 16px 2px 4px; font-size: 120%; display: flex; break-inside: avoid; } ul li a { /* display: inline-block; */ background-color: #35516c; color: #d2dade; text-decoration: none; padding: 2px 8px; border: solid 1px #d2dade; flex-grow: 0; } ul li a:first-child { flex-grow: 1; /* width: 106px; */ /* margin-right: -3px; */ } ul li a:hover { background-color: #1e445d; color: #fff; border: solid 1px #fff; }
Makes sense. in this case the margin was there from the “display: flex version” and I didn’t realize in the first tests.
Which is exactly what I wanted… and was confused as to why there wasn’t an easy option. This is perfect.
Thank you very much!