Paweł Adamski
Paweł Adamski

Reputation: 3415

Why doesn't CSS absolute work with a static parent?

W3Schools says that

element with position: absolute is positioned relative to the nearest positioned ancestor. Where positioned element is one whose position is anything except static.

My question is why are static elements excluded?

I know that I can set

position: relative;
left:0px;
top:0px;
right:0px;
bottom:0px

which is the same as position:static, but in my opinion, it looks like a workaround.

Upvotes: 9

Views: 2260

Answers (2)

Quentin
Quentin

Reputation: 943564

My question is why static elements are excluded?

Because otherwise absolute wouldn't be able to position with respect to anything other than the element's immediate parent.

I know that I can set position: relative;left:0px;top:0px;right:0px;bottom:0px

You don't need to explicitly set the distances. Just the position property will do.

Upvotes: 7

Niet the Dark Absol
Niet the Dark Absol

Reputation: 324640

Just position: relative will do.

This is a good thing, because otherwise the browser will have to apply calculations on every element instead of being able to take shorter routes for static positioning.

It also means you can have arbitrary containers, so long as they're static, and still have an element be positionable relative to the container of your choice.

Upvotes: 6

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