I want to add absolutely positioned element as an :after
(of :before
) of a table row.
Look at this:
I assume that when I add such an element, the rendering engine (at least Webkit based) thinks it is a table cell of some kind.
:before
works badly in all browsers. But :after
works very well in Firefox and almost good in webkit. In webkit it keeps a small space and makes the whole table width bigger.
- This is what bothers me in webkit.
How to fix this? And where can I read about why it is happening?
In this example, you are using the ::after
and ::before
pseudo-elements to add content after or before a table row, which essentially will break the table layout and lead to unpredictable results.
If you were to add the generated content to a table-cell, the results would be more consistent.
There is not much to refer to except the original specification for generated content:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-CSS2-20090908/generate.html#before-after-content
In addition, keep in mind that the CSS rendering engine generates anonymous boxes when creating tables:
http://www.w3.org/TR/2009/CR-CSS2-20090908/tables.html#anonymous-boxes
However, since generated content is not part of the DOM, the whole table-rendering process probably cannot deal with the extra pseudo-element in a sensible way.
You are delving into an area that is not well specified and any support will be browser specific.
Depending on your layout requirements, you might need to use JavaScript or jQuery to alter the DOM of the table to the desired effect.