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Posted by Neredbojias on 11/28/05 07:18
With neither quill nor qualm, celineusa@gmail.com quothed:
> Hey, thank you very much for the answer. The padding works, but it
> still adds a 100% under the 100px...
>
> Any other ideas?
The padding-top should be on the sub-con div which does _not_ have 100%
height designated. Also, what dtd are you using? That could make a
difference. It's best to use html 4.01 strict.
>
> And also, if my body text is more than the page length, it will scroll
> down, but the menu will only stretch to a 100%, and not more.
> Any thoughts?
>
> Thanks,
> Celine
>
>
> Neredbojias wrote:
> > With neither quill nor qualm, celineusa@gmail.com quothed:
> >
> > > Hi All,
> > >
> > > I am using CSS, and nested DIV.
> > > I have a container div which is set to height: 100%.
> > > On my page, inside my container div, I have many divs.
> > > On the top, I have a div for the logo with height:100px
> > > Under, I have my menu background on the left in another div that is
> > > supposed to take the rest of the page in height, and stretch if
> > > necessary. I fixed the height to 100%.
> > > However, the total height of the page now does 100%+100px
> > > How do I make my page do 100% and not 100%+100px?
> >
> > Use padding-top:100px; for a sub-container div inside the container div
> > and position the logo div absolutely (from outside).
> >
> >
> > --
> > Neredbojias
> > Contrary to popular belief, it is believable.
>
>
--
Neredbojias
Contrary to popular belief, it is believable.
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