Here’s some hardcore deep-dive CSS nerdery from PPK. If you can wrap your mind around min-content
(the smallest an element can be based on the content it contains) and max-content
(the largest the content of an element can push it) then it’s just one more little step to understanding fit-content
. As PPK says, it’s shorthand for:
.box { width: fit-content; /* ... is the same as ... */ width: auto; min-width: min-content; max-width: max-content;
}
Which means the element will be able to resize between the min and max.
My brain always thinks about the only-slightly-convoluted UI situation of centering a horizontal nav that needs it’s own background for some reason. min-content
doesn’t work as it smashes it all too narrow. max-content
doesn’t work because then it doesn’t allow wrapping. So fit-content
is the baby bear porridge.
PPK’s article has a lot more detail about browser quirks and includes really effective interactive figures, so definitely read that — especially if you fancy yourself deeply knowledgable about CSS, as it gets humbling fast when you start getting into the fit-content()
function in CSS Grid. Like how does 1fr fit-content(200px) 1fr
play out in a template?
1fr min(min(max-content, available-size), max(min-content, 200px)) 1fr
Note: “where available-size
is the available width in the grid.” Phew!
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