Reputation: 25415
I have an angular app that uses bootstrap 4. I have a nav bar that sticks to the top, and I want to add content that fills the remaining space in the browser. Aside from the navbar at the top, I have another div that itself contains header and footer content. Between the header and footer, I have a main content section, and I want that section (#two
in my example below) to fill all empty space.
I thought I could use css flexbox to accomplish this, but my simple non-bootstrap flexbox example seemed to do nothing when I moved into the bootstrap world. I was using these docs to try to figure this out.
I thought using align-self-stretch
should help accomplish this goal, but it sort of looks like the containing elements might be sizing themselves just big enough to hold my #outer
content, so there's no flexbox expanding to be done. I tried naively just adding height:100%
styles to the containing divs just to try to get some stretching, but that didn't seem to help.
I created this plunker example based on @ZimSystem's response. His codeply example seemed to work exactly as I wanted, but when I tried to piece the changes into my simple angular code, the flex stretching didn't happen. I'm not sure what I'm doing to break it in the conversion.
This is the entirety of the angular component I am viewing at the moment:
<div id="outer" class="d-flex flex-column flex-grow">
<div id="one" class="">
header content <br>
another line <br>
And another
</div>
<div id="two" class="bg-info h-100 flex-grow">
main content that I want to expand to cover remaining available height
</div>
<div id="three" class="">
footer content
</div>
</div>
And here's the application container showing the navbar and injection point:
<div class="d-flex flex-column h-100">
<nav class="navbar navbar-toggleable-md sticky-top bg-faded">
<a class="navbar-brand" href="#">
<h1 class="navbar-brand mb-0">My App</h1>
</a>
<ul class="navbar-nav">
<li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link" routerLink="/flex">My flex view</a></li>
</ul>
</nav>
<router-outlet></router-outlet>
</div>
How can I get my #two
div to expand to fill the space while having my #one
and #three
divs acting as content headers and footers anchored to the top and bottom of the content area?
Upvotes: 55
Views: 113595
Reputation: 362700
Update Bootstrap 4.1.0
The flex-grow-1
and flex-fill
classes are included in Bootstrap 4.1.0
Update Bootstrap 4.0.0
Add a flex-grow
class like this:
.flex-grow {
flex: 1 0 auto;
}
Then, the utility classes can be used for the rest of the layout:
<div class="d-flex flex-column h-100">
<nav class="navbar navbar-toggleable-md sticky-top bg-faded">
<a class="navbar-brand" href="#">
<h1 class="navbar-brand mb-0">My App</h1>
</a>
<ul class="navbar-nav">
<li class="nav-item"><a class="nav-link">Item 1</a></li>
</ul>
</nav>
<div id="outer" class="d-flex flex-column flex-grow">
<div id="one" class="">
header content
<br> another line
<br> And another
</div>
<div id="two" class="bg-info h-100 flex-grow">
main content that I want to expand to cover remaining available height
</div>
<div id="three" class="">
footer content 40px height
</div>
</div>
</div>
https://www.codeply.com/go/3ZDkRAghGU
Here's another example with on Bootstrap 4.3.1 that has a navbar, sidebar and footer with scrolling content area: https://www.codeply.com/go/LIaOWljJm8
Upvotes: 73
Reputation: 73761
The problem, when using ZimSystem's markup in your Angular plunker, is that the component is inserted in the rendered HTML as an additional container with the flex
tag:
<div class="d-flex flex-column h-100">
<nav class="navbar navbar-toggleable-md sticky-top bg-faded">
...
</nav>
<router-outlet></router-outlet>
<flex>
<div id="outer" class="d-flex flex-column flex-grow">
...
</div>
</flex>
</div>
In order to make it work as intended, you can remove the outer div from the component and set the flex classes on the component's host container, as shown in this modified plunker.
import {Component, NgModule, HostBinding, VERSION} from '@angular/core'
import { RouterOutlet, RouterModule } from '@angular/router'
import {BrowserModule} from '@angular/platform-browser'
@Component({
selector: 'flex',
template: `
<div id="one" class="">
header content
<br> another line
<br> And another
</div>
<div id="two" class="bg-info h-100 flex-grow">
main content that I want to expand to cover remaining available height
</div>
<div id="three" class="">
footer content
</div>
`
})
export class FlexComponent {
@HostBinding('class') classes = 'd-flex flex-column flex-grow';
...
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 11525
You can make the component grow to fill its container and then have it as a flex column as well so the content will also grow. To do this use :host
to target the component element.
flex.component.ts
@Component({
selector: 'flex',
template: `
<div id="outer" class="d-flex flex-column flex-grow">
<div id="one" class="">
header content
<br> another line
<br> And another
</div>
<div id="two" class="bg-info h-100 flex-grow">
main content that I want to expand to cover remaining available height
</div>
<div id="three" class="">
footer content
</div>
</div>
`,
styles: [':host {flex: 1 0 auto; display: flex; flex-direction: column }']
})
I've updated the plunk.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1168
Your component is wrapped into a <flex>
element that needs the same flexbox styling to stretch vertically as well, allowing it's content to stretch with it. So adding class="d-flex flex-column flex-grow"
to the <flex>
will work. Here's a working fork of your plunker example.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 8726
If you can not control the behavor of the class you are using. Just remove all of it and use this css only.
html,
body,
flex {
height: 100%;
margin: 0;
}
.outer {
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
height: 100%;
}
.two {
background-color: #123;
flex-grow: 1;
color: #FFF;
}
<flex>
<div class="outer">
<div class="one">
Hey. This is header. <br> Hey. This is header. <br> Hey. This is header. <br> Hey. This is header. <br>
</div>
<div class="two">
Hey. This is body
</div>
<div class="three">
Hey. This is footer <br> Hey. This is footer <br>
</div>
</div>
</flex>
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 19
.wrapper {
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
height: 100vh;
}
.flex-grow {
flex: 1;
}
Add a wrapper component that holds your content blocks, and apply the flex-grow
class to the one that you want to fill the remaining space.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1855
CSS
html, body {
height: 100%;
}
.flex-grow {
flex: 1;
}
flex.components.ts
//our root app component
import {Component, NgModule, VERSION} from '@angular/core'
import { RouterOutlet, RouterModule } from '@angular/router'
import {BrowserModule} from '@angular/platform-browser'
@Component({
selector: 'flex',
host: {'class': 'flex-grow'},
template: `
<div id="outer" class="d-flex flex-column h-100 flex-grow">
<div id="one" class="">
header content
<br> another line
<br> And another
</div>
<div id="two" class="bg-info flex-grow">
main content that I want to expand to cover remaining available height
</div>
<div id="three" class="">
footer content
</div>
</div>
`
})
export class FlexComponent {
constructor() {}
}
Result - https://plnkr.co/edit/vQS7Jw58zmlVshz9YmQ8?p=preview Thanks:)
Upvotes: 0