Reputation: 298582
I've seen this notation used a lot, and I was wondering, is there is any notable difference between these two notations?
element#id
{
property: 0;
}
and
element#id
{
property: 0px;
}
I use property: 0px;
all the time, as I find it cleaner looking, but I'm not really sure if the browser interprets 0px
differently than 0
.
Does anyone know which one is better or correct?
Upvotes: 105
Views: 35817
Reputation: 1698
If somebody gives you 0 EUR. It is that same like 0 Dollar or 0 Zloty etc. What you got is nothing = 0. That is why in the case of 0 you dont need to set a unit.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 11
zero-units Zero values don't need units. An easy way to save bytes in CSS is not include units when a value is 0. For instance, 0px and 0 are the exact same ...
Upvotes: 1
Reputation:
I know that there should be no difference between 0px
and 0
but I've found that sometimes there is.
I was trying to center an object like this:
position: absolute;
left: max(0px, calc((100vw - 400px)/2));
max-width: 400px;
It works but if you substitute 0px
with 0
it doesn't.
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 14455
Unit identifiers are optional, but there is no noted performance increase (although you are saving two characters).
CSS2 - From W3C CSS 2.1 Specification for Syntax and basic data types:
The format of a length value (denoted by <length> in this specification) is a <number> (with or without a decimal point) immediately followed by a unit identifier (e.g., px, em, etc.). After a zero length, the unit identifier is optional.
(Emphasis mine)
CSS3 - From W3C CSS Values and Units Module Level 3 (Currently in Candidate Recommendation at the time of this writing)
For zero lengths the unit identifier is optional (i.e. can be syntactically represented as the 0).
Upvotes: 58
Reputation: 4247
They are the same. The browser interprets both as 0, so go with whatever is more readable for you.
Upvotes: 22
Reputation: 237110
Zero of anything is zero. 0px
= 0%
= 0em
= 0pt
= 0
Most people leave the unit off because it is simply unnecessary clutter.
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 32030
You can use either - my best advice is not to worry too much but be consistent in doing it either one way or the other. I personally prefer to specify '0px' for the following reasons:
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 298582
While the unit is optional when the value is 0
, I tend to leave it in, as I can then tweak the values with Chrome's Developer Tools by clicking on the value and pressing the up/down arrow keys. Without a unit, that isn't really possible.
Also, CSS minifiers strip the units off of 0
values anyways, so it won't really matter in the end.
Upvotes: 41
Reputation: 3059
As the others say, it doesn't really matter if its 0, though I choose to add the measurements to all of my values so anyone else looking at my CSS files can gauge what measurements they're likely to deal with elsewhere.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation:
As far as I'm aware there is no difference between them, since 0px = 0em = 0ex = 0% = 0
. It's purely up to you, as the developer, to decide what you like best (unless you have corporate coding standards that you need to follow, of course).
From most of the code samples I've seen, most people use the unitless version. To me, it just looks cleaner. If you're pushing a significant amount of data (say, if you're Google), those two bytes can add up to a lot of bandwidth, especially since you're quite likely to repeat them multiple times in your stylesheet.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 34179
I personally find 0
cleaner than 0px
. That's two extra characters that can add up. Why add extra bytes when you don't need to. I have see padding: 0px 0px 0px 0px
which can easily be expressed as padding: 0
way too often.
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 186762
Zero pixels is equal to zero inches and zero meters and so forth. 0
is all you need.
Upvotes: 4