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François Parmentiera) The Markup Method: The first and W3C-recommended approach is a little ugly - extra markup. At the very end of your content, toss in a cleared element - typically something like <br style="clear:both">. It's the HTML equivalent of wedging matc
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Yvonne LExample, solution.. so simple!
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Simple Clearing of Floats Design Blog: Pixel Perfect by Alex Walker Feb 26th, 2005 @ 4:20 PM MST Without getting wanting to stray too deeply in Simon and Stuart's technical CSS territory, I thought this was worth noting. For all it's many advantages, sometimes it's the little things in CSS layout makes difficult that get you. Clearing floated elements is a good example. The Problem: One of the simplest and most common layout structures involves the placing of a small, set-width DIV -- perhaps navigation, a quote or a bio -- within a larger wrapping DIV that contains the remaining content. In a markup this might be something like:
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Simple Clearing of Floats Design Blog: Pixel Perfect by Alex Walker Feb 26th, 2005 @ 4:20 PM MST Without getting wanting to stray too deeply in Simon and Stuart's technical CSS territory, I thought this was worth noting. For all it's many advantages, sometimes it's the little things in CSS layout makes difficult that get you. Clearing floated elements is a good example. The Problem: One of the simplest and most common layout structures involves the placing of a small, set-width DIV -- perhaps navigation, a quote or a bio -- within a larger wrapping DIV that contains the remaining content. In a markup this might be something like:
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Simple Clearing of Floats Design Blog: Pixel Perfect by Alex Walker Feb 26th, 2005 @ 4:20 PM MST Without getting wanting to stray too deeply in Simon and Stuart's technical CSS territory, I thought this was worth noting. For all it's many advantages, sometimes it's the little things in CSS layout makes difficult that get you. Clearing floated elements is a good example. The Problem: One of the simplest and most common layout structures involves the placing of a small, set-width DIV -- perhaps navigation, a quote or a bio -- within a larger wrapping DIV that contains the remaining content. In a markup this might be something like:
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