How to make div's percentage width relative to parent div and not viewport

sean picture sean · Dec 13, 2012 · Viewed 150.9k times · Source

Here is the HTML I am working with.

What I would like to happen is for the inner div to occupy 50% of the space given to its parent div(outer). Instead, is is getting 50% of the space available to the viewport, which means that as the browser/viewport shrinks in size, so does it.

Given that the outer div has min-width of 2000px, I would expect the inner div to be at least 1000px wide.

Answer

Juan Mendes picture Juan Mendes · Dec 13, 2012

Specifying a non-static position, e.g., position: absolute/relative on a node means that it will be used as the reference for absolutely positioned elements within it http://jsfiddle.net/E5eEk/1/

See https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/CSS/CSS_layout/Positioning#Positioning_contexts

We can change the positioning context — which element the absolutely positioned element is positioned relative to. This is done by setting positioning on one of the element's ancestors.

#outer {
  min-width: 2000px; 
  min-height: 1000px; 
  background: #3e3e3e; 
  position:relative
}

#inner {
  left: 1%; 
  top: 45px; 
  width: 50%; 
  height: auto; 
  position: absolute; 
  z-index: 1;
}

#inner-inner {
  background: #efffef;
  position: absolute; 
  height: 400px; 
  right: 0px; 
  left: 0px;
}
<div id="outer">
  <div id="inner">
    <div id="inner-inner"></div>
  </div>
</div>