CSS Layout with Flexbox UPDATE: This page is still good, but I recommend this course on flexbox I've put together. It includes an updated version of this page plus more videos and a cheat sheet. Laying out a design with CSS is fraught with peril of cross-browser bugs and mysteriously collapsing margins. But new tools like flexbox have transformed this once odious task into something you shouldn't dread. By the end of this chapter you'll be coding up new layouts for your design faster than you can think of them. Remember those old cartoons with the road runner and the coyote? Rocket propelled rollerskates, bottled lightning, bundles of dynamite, magnetic bird seed, razor boomerangs, "super" bombs and giant trampolines -- no technology could catch the bird. Every tool backfired and sent Wile E. Coyote plummeting to hillarious death. Using CSS to layout your design is like trying to catch the road runner with a jet-powered pogo stick. It won't end well. CSS sucks at layout Nothing is more frustrating than writing a pile of code, refreshing your browser and seeing a jumbled mess of overlapping text and images. You can't use tables because they aren't semantic. Floats and clears never do what you expect. Just to center something on the page requires strange incantations of auto margins or text-align -- the center tag is right out. But you know what? This is old news because CSS doesn't suck at layout anymore.

Flexbox Once you spend some time with flexbox you'll feel like an unstoppable super hero of CSS. Your footer will stay at the bottom of the page where it belongs. Your LIs will flow effortlessly into neat little columns. Divs will shrink and grow and fly in delicate formations like the Blue Angels. Image tags will dance and jump and sing songs of your design prowess. "Wait, let's not get carried away" you say, "Flexbox is too new. You can't even use it in IE9." It doesn't matter. Think about it: how many browsers does a PSD work in? None? Exactly. As a designer you're not building the final version of the design. You don't care if flexbox doesn't work in Opera Mini because the comp you are creating for your client only needs to run in Chrome. Worry about SeaMonkey later. Diving into Flexbox You only need to know a handful of CSS properties to use flexbox. We'll start with an overview and get some terminology out of the way. Everything starts with the flex container. Once an element is set as a flex container its children follow the flexbox rules for layout instead of the standard block, inline and inline-block rules. Within a flex container items line up on the "main axis" and the main axis can either be horizontal or vertical so you can arrange items into columns or rows. Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The main axis is horizontal, so the the flex items are lined up in a row. Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The main axis is vertical, so the the flex items are lined up in a column. There is another axis perpendicular to the main axis called the cross axis. You can shift items along both axes. In the examples you've seen so far they have been centered but you can also move them to the beginning or end of either axis. Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The content is in the bottom right corner because it's aligned with the end of the main axis and the end of the cross axis. Spacing around flex items Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The flex items are centered on the cross axis and have space evenly distributed around them along the main axis. Shrinking and growing You can define the size of flex items. This lets you create layouts with, for example, a column with a fixed width and a column that grows or shrinks with the space available. Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The left flex item stretches to fill about a third of the screen and the others shrink to fill the rest evenly. In this case I've also decided to have them grow and fill the vertical space. Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The skinny column is fixed at 50 pixels. The other columns grow and shrink to fill in the remaining space evenly. Time to look at some code I've avoided showing you code up to this point because the CSS property names don't map well to the very simple concepts behind flexbox. To help you out I'm introducing the code in a screencast so you can watch what happens to the layout live as I type. I've also created a cheat sheet you can use while you get used to the terminology. The basics. Growing and shrinking flex items. More advanced odds and ends

Examples from Real Websites Flexbox doesn't solve every layout problem but it certainly fixes the worst of them. As we look at a few real world examples you will learn a few other techniques for arranging elements on the page but flexbox alone will get you 90% of the way most of the time. 37signals The product section of the 37signals homepage. You're looking at three divs centered horizontally — certainly not the most complicated layout of all time. Even so, before flexbox creating this kind of layout required some thought; centering elements on the page was not intuitive. The HTML <div class="products"> <div> <img src="basecamp.png"></img> <h2><a href="">Basecamp</a></h2> <h3>Manage Projects</h3> <p>Used by millions for product management.</p> </div> <div> <img src="highrise.png"></img> <h2><a href="">Highrise</a></h2> <h3><a href="">Manage Contacts</a></h3> <p>Know the people you do business with.</p> </div> <div> <img src="campfire.png"></img> <h2><a href="">Campfire</a></h2> <h3>Work in Real-Time</h3> <p>Group chat rooms for your business.</p> </div> </div> No layout yet Before any layout logic it's all mushed to the left and in a column. This is how the markup renders with just enough CSS to make the styling look about the same. You are looking at the default browser layout before we've applied any flexbox rules. The three boxes are div elements. Div elements are block elements and block elements stack, they don't flow next to each other. First let's center it on the page and get everything flowing into a row. The CSS .products{ display: flex; flex-flow: row; justify-content: center; } Five lines of CSS later... Five lines of flexbox code setting three properties and our Basecamp example is starting to look pretty good. The div wrapping the product divs was set to "display: flex" to make it a flex container. Then to get its items into a row I set the flex-flow property to "row". Getting everything centered was easy. Justify-content let's you move flex items on the main axis. In this case the main axis is horizontal because the flex-flow property is set to "row". When the main axis is horizontal, justify-content will move the items to the left and right. If the main axis is vertical, (set flex-flow to column), justify-content moves the items up and down instead of left and right. To center the product divs in the example horizontally I set justify-content to "center". The first real world example is almost done. The middle container needs some space around it and all of the items in each container should be centered horizontally. To center the items in the div it's easiest to think about them as flowing in a column and then centering them on the cross axis. So in this case the main axis is vertical and the cross axis is horizontal. Here's the code: /* 1. Make all of the product divs flex containers. 2. Set their items to flow into a column. 3. Center them left-to-right by centering them on the cross axis using align-items. */ .products > div{ display: flex; flex-flow: column; align-items: center; } /* Using selectors like this is covered in another chapter.*/ .products > div:nth-child(2){ margin: 0 2em; } Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The finished example with everything lined up inside the product divs and margin around the middle. Anatomy of a Tweet An example tweet. The HTML <div class="tweet"> <div class="content"> <img src="aaron.png"></img> <h2>Aaron Gustafson <span>@AaronGustafson</span></h2> <time>12h</time> <p> Smartphone Browser localStorage is up to 5x Faster than Native Cache <a href="http://www.mobify.com/blog/smartphone-localstorage-outperforms-browser-cache/">mobify.com/blog/smartphon ...</a> </p> <ul class="actions"> <li><a href="">Collapse</a></li> <li><a href="">Reply</a></li> <li><a href="">Retweet</a></li> <li><a href="">Favorite</a></li> <li><a href="">More</a></li> </ul> <ul class="meta"> <li class="retweets"> <span>7</span> <span>RETWEETS</span> </li> <li class="favorites"> <span>5</span> <span>FAVORITES</span> </li> <li class="people"> <ul class="people"> <li> <img src="people1.jpg"/> </li> <li> <img src="people2.jpg"/> </li> <li> <img src="people3.jpg"/> </li> <li> <img src="people4.jpg"/> </li> <li> <img src="people5.jpg"/> </li> <li> <img src="people6.jpg"/> </li> <li> <img src="people7.jpg"/> </li> </ul> </li> </ul> <time>4:35 AM - 24 May 13</time> </div> <div class="reply"> <div contenteditable="true"> Reply to <span>@AaronGustafson</span> </div> </div> </div> No layout The default browser layout: stacked in a column and pushed over to the left. Perfect is the enemy of done When confronted with a confounding layout problem a common pitfall is to waste time finding the "best" solution. As soon as you find yourself pondering the merits of changing the markup and worrying about messing up the semantics, stop what you're doing and see if absolute positioning would work. Whenever you're thinking about technical decisions you're not thinking about design. Remember, your job is to create a comp, not the final site. The code you are writing will be reworked and rewritten so don't spend any time making it perfect -- perfect is the enemy of done. The first challenge with the tweet is the user profile image and the date tag. Although not obvious in this example the tweet text flows under the date and the profile image seems to have its own column. The way the markup was written does not make a flexbox layout immediately obvious. When I put this example together I wasted a few minutes thinking about ways I could change the markup and get the layout I wanted, but then I caught myself and just absolutely positioned both elements where I wanted them. The CSS /* create the space on the left for the profile image*/ .tweet .content, .tweet .reply{ padding-left: 70px; } /*move the image to the left into the column*/ .content > img{ position: absolute; margin-left: -60px; } /* Move the timestamp up and to the right I use "em" instead of pixels here, but pixels are just fine. */ .content > time:first-of-type{ position: absolute; margin-top: -1.5em; margin-left: 30em; } /*I added some vertical padding to all of the elements in the content div. */ .content > *{ padding: .25em 0; } Absolutely positioned two elements What the tweet looks like after absolutely positioning two elements and adding some spacing. The next step is to take the actions, (e.g. collapse, reply, retweet, etc.), the retweets and favorites and the list of small profile pictures and put them into rows instead of columns. A dash of flexbox .actions, li.people, .meta, .people > ul { display: flex; } Almost done One line of CSS and it's almost done. Elements in containers are arranged into rows by default so you just need to set the container to display: flex. You'll notice in the real tweet the numbers are on top of "favorites" and "retweets". There are two ways to do this. The first is to treat them like flex containers and put them into a column. The second way is to make each of the spans wrapping the numbers into a block element instead of inline. The second way is only obvious if you know that block elements stack. The beauty of flexbox is you don't need to know the ins and outs of block, inline or inline-block elements. Learn the basics but don't waste time — use flexbox when it's not obvious. Stack the elements .meta .retweets, .meta .favorites{ display: flex; flex-flow: column; } Finished Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). Two more lines of CSS for layout plus some spacing and borders around key elements. Yes, it's missing icons for the action links. It's just an example. CSS-Tricks I created a third, much more complicated example for you to look at. I recreated most of the CSS-Tricks forum using flexbox for layout. Load the example in another window (only works in Chrome). The CSS-Tricks forum reverse engineered using flexbox. Use the skills you learned in the chapter on using Chrome's Developer tools to see how some of the elements in the example are laid out using flexbox.

Tips and tricks When absolutely positioning an element use margins instead of top, left, right, bottom. Elements absolutely positioned with margins are more consistent across different screen resolutions.

Use ems instead of pixels. Ems adjust when you change font-size. If you increased the base font size in this example the date would maintain its position.

Use padding instead of margin for spacing. Spaces created with margin sometimes collapse into each other instead of stacking. Sometimes you want this but most of the time it's not helpful. Padding doesn't collapse so it's more predictable than using margins.

Use the universal selector, *, without fear. Experienced web developers avoid the universal selector for performance reasons. You shouldn't spend any time thinking about this. There are performance issues but nothing to worry about when creating the initial design.

The key to creating more complicated layouts with flexbox is to break it into pieces. Don't be afraid to make everything a flex container if that's what works for you.

Summary Mastering the art of laying out elements on a page using CSS is the hardest part of designing in the browser.

Flexbox has made this task much easier.

Here is your flexbox cheat sheet, use it wisely.

Every example in this chapter has code you can look at and use in your projects. You'll need to download Chrome if you don't already have it since all code was written for that browser. Example 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6.

Here is the 37signals example, the twitter example and the CSS-Tricks forum.

You can download the entire chapter including the example code here.