Recently I was looking through some website's code, and saw that every <div>
had a class clearfix
.
After a quick Google search, I learned that it is for IE6 sometimes, but what actually is a clearfix?
Could you provide some examples of a layout with a clearfix, compared to a layout without a clearfix?
It's worth noting that today, the use of floated elements for layout is getting more and more discouraged with the use of better alternatives.
display: inline-block
- BetterFlexbox is supported from Firefox 18, Chrome 21, Opera 12.10, and Internet Explorer 10, Safari 6.1 (including Mobile Safari) and Android's default browser 4.4.
For a detailed browser list see: https://caniuse.com/flexbox.
(Perhaps once its position is established completely, it may be the absolutely recommended way of laying out elements.)
A clearfix is a way for an element to automatically clear its child elements, so that you don't need to add additional markup. It's generally used in float layouts where elements are floated to be stacked horizontally.
The clearfix is a way to combat the zero-height container problem for floated elements
A clearfix is performed as follows:
.clearfix:after {
content: " "; /* Older browser do not support empty content */
visibility: hidden;
display: block;
height: 0;
clear: both;
}
Or, if you don't require IE<8 support, the following is fine too:
.clearfix:after {
content: "";
display: table;
clear: both;
}
Normally you would need to do something as follows:
<div>
<div style="float: left;">Sidebar</div>
<div style="clear: both;"></div> <!-- Clear the float -->
</div>
With clearfix, you only need the following:
<div class="clearfix">
<div style="float: left;" class="clearfix">Sidebar</div>
<!-- No Clearing div! -->
</div>
Read about it in this article - by Chris Coyer @ CSS-Tricks