Reputation: 10179
The opposite of visibility: hidden
is visibility: visible
. Similarly, is there any opposite for display: none
?
Many people become confused figuring out how to show an element when it has display: none
, since it's not as clear as using the visibility
property.
I could just use visibility: hidden
instead of display: none
, but it does not give the same effect, so I am not going with it.
Upvotes: 276
Views: 351140
Reputation: 9469
Use display: revert
From the documentation stated on https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/revert
The revert CSS keyword reverts the cascaded value of the property from its current value to the value the property would have had if no changes had been made by the current style origin to the current element. Thus, it resets the property to its inherited value if it inherits from its parent or to the default value established by the user agent's stylesheet (or by user styles, if any exist). It can be applied to any CSS property, including the CSS shorthand property all.
It supported accross all major browsers - https://caniuse.com/css-revert-value
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 2664
Here's an answer from the future… some 8 years after you asked the question. While there's still no opposite value for display: none
, read on… There's something even better.
The display
property is so overloaded it's not funny. It has at least three different functions. It controls the:
block
, inline
)flex
, grid
)contents
, none
).This has been the reality for so long, we've learnt to live with it, but some long-overdue improvements are (hopefully!) coming our way.
Firefox now supports two-value syntax (or multi-keyword values) for the display
property which separates outer and inner display types. For example, block
now becomes block flow
, and flex
becomes block flex
. It doesn't solve the problem of none
, but the explicit separation of concerns is a step in the right direction I think.
Chromium (85+), meanwhile, has given us the content-visibility
property, and announced it with some fanfare. It aims to solve a different problem—speeding up page load times by not rendering an element (and its child layouts) until it approaches the viewport and really needs to be seen, while still being accessible for 'Find' searches, etc. It does this automatically just by giving it the value auto
. This is exciting news in itself, but look at what else it does…
The
content-visibility: hidden
property gives you all of the same benefits of unrendered content and cached rendering state ascontent-visibility: auto
does off-screen. However, unlike withauto
, it does not automatically start to render on-screen.This gives you more control, allowing you to hide an element's contents and later unhide them quickly.
Compare it to other common ways of hiding element's contents:
display: none
: hides the element and destroys its rendering state. This means unhiding the element is as expensive as rendering a new element with the same contents.visibility: hidden
: hides the element and keeps its rendering state. This doesn't truly remove the element from the document, as it (and it's subtree) still takes up geometric space on the page and can still be clicked on. It also updates the rendering state any time it is needed even when hidden.
content-visibility: hidden
, on the other hand, hides the element while preserving its rendering state, so, if there are any changes that need to happen, they only happen when the element is shown again (i.e. thecontent-visibility: hidden
property is removed).
Wow. So it's kind of what display: none
should have been all along—a way of removing an element from the layout, gracefully, and completely independently of display type! So the 'opposite' of content-visibility: hidden
is content-visibility: visible
, but you have a third, very useful option in auto
which does lazy rendering for you, speeding up your initial page loading.
The only bad news here is that Firefox and Safari are yet to adopt it. But who knows, by the time you (dear fellow developer) are reading this, that may have changed. Keep one eye on https://caniuse.com/css-content-visibility!
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 1
display:unset sets it back to some initial setting, not to the previous "display" values
i just copied the previous display value (in my case display: flex;) again(after display non), and it overtried the display:none successfuly
(i used display:none for hiding elements for mobile and small screens)
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 7
You can use display: block
Example :
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>
<p id="demo">Lorem Ipsum</p>
<button type="button"
onclick="document.getElementById('demo').style.display='none'">Click Me!</button>
<button type="button"
onclick="document.getElementById('demo').style.display='block'">Click Me!</button>
</body>
</html>
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 125
I ran into this challenge when building an app where I wanted a table hidden for certain users but not for others.
Initially I set it up as display:none but then display:inline-block for those users who I wanted to see it but I experienced the formatting issues you might expect (columns consolidating or generally messy).
The way I worked around it was to show the table first and then do "display:none" for those users who I didn't want to see it. This way, it formatted normally but then disappeared as needed.
Bit of a lateral solution but might help someone!
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 585
The best answer for display: none
is
display:inline
or
display:normal
Upvotes: -3
Reputation: 5823
A true opposite to display: none
there is not (yet).
But display: unset
is very close and works in most cases.
From MDN (Mozilla Developer Network):
The unset CSS keyword is the combination of the initial and inherit keywords. Like these two other CSS-wide keywords, it can be applied to any CSS property, including the CSS shorthand all. This keyword resets the property to its inherited value if it inherits from its parent or to its initial value if not. In other words, it behaves like the inherit keyword in the first case and like the initial keyword in the second case.
Note also that display: revert
is currently being developed. See MDN for details.
Upvotes: 115
Reputation: 91
In the case of a printer friendly stylesheet, I use the following:
/* screen style */
.print_only { display: none; }
/* print stylesheet */
div.print_only { display: block; }
span.print_only { display: inline; }
.no_print { display: none; }
I used this when I needed to print a form containing values and the input fields were difficult to print. So I added the values wrapped in a span.print_only tag (div.print_only was used elsewhere) and then applied the .no_print class to the input fields. So on-screen you would see the input fields and when printed, only the values. If you wanted to get fancy you could use JS to update the values in the span tags when the fields were updated but that wasn't necessary in my case. Perhaps not the the most elegant solution but it worked for me!
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 98796
display: none
doesn’t have a literal opposite like visibility:hidden
does.
The visibility
property decides whether an element is visible or not. It therefore has two states (visible
and hidden
), which are opposite to each other.
The display
property, however, decides what layout rules an element will follow. There are several different kinds of rules for how elements will lay themselves out in CSS, so there are several different values (block
, inline
, inline-block
etc — see the documentation for these values here ).
display:none
removes an element from the page layout entirely, as if it wasn’t there.
All other values for display
cause the element to be a part of the page, so in a sense they’re all opposite to display:none
.
But there isn’t one value that’s the direct converse of display:none
- just like there's no one hair style that's the opposite of "bald".
Upvotes: 236
Reputation: 81
you can use
display: normal;
It works as normal.... Its a small hacking in css ;)
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 204
Like Paul explains there is no literal opposite of display: none in HTML as each element has a different default display and you can also change the display with a class or inline style etc.
However if you use something like jQuery, their show and hide functions behave as if there was an opposite of display none. When you hide, and then show an element again, it will display in exactly the same manner it did before it was hidden. They do this by storing the old value of the display property on hiding of the element so that when you show it again it will display in the same way it did before you hid it. https://github.com/jquery/jquery/blob/740e190223d19a114d5373758127285d14d6b71e/src/css.js#L180
This means that if you set a div for example to display inline, or inline-block and you hide it and then show it again, it will once again show as display inline or inline-block same as it was before
<div style="display:inline" >hello</div>
<div style="display:inline-block">hello2</div>
<div style="display:table-cell" >hello3</div>
script:
$('a').click(function(){
$('div').toggle();
});
Notice that the display property of the div will remain constant even after it was hidden (display:none) and shown again.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 827
The best "opposite" would be to return it to the default value which is:
display: inline
Upvotes: -4
Reputation: 4495
visibility:hidden will hide the element but element is their with DOM. And in case of display:none it'll remove the element from the DOM.
So you have option for element to either hide or unhide. But once you delete it ( I mean display none) it has not clear opposite value. display have several values like display:block,display:inline, display:inline-block and many other. you can check it out from W3C.
Upvotes: -2
Reputation: 13536
When changing element's display
in Javascript, in many cases a suitable option to 'undo' the result of element.style.display = "none"
is element.style.display = ""
. This removes the display
declaration from the style
attribute, reverting the actual value of display
property to the value set in the stylesheet for the document (to the browser default if not redefined elsewhere). But the more reliable approach is to have a class in CSS like
.invisible { display: none; }
and adding/removing this class name to/from element.className
.
Upvotes: 44