As you can see in the CSS below, I want child2
to position itself before child1
. This is because the site I'm currently developing should also work on mobile devices, on which the child2
should be at the bottom, as it contains the navigation which I want below the content on the mobile devices. - Why not 2 masterpages? This is the only 2 divs
which are repositioned in the entire HTML, so 2 masterpages for this minor change is an overkill.
HTML:
<div id="parent">
<div class="child1"></div>
<div class="child2"></div>
</div>
CSS:
parent { position: relative; width: 100%; }
child1 { width: auto; margin-left: 160px; }
child2 { width: 145px; position: absolute; top: 0px; bottom: 0px; }
child2
has dynamic height, as different subsites could have more or less navigation items.
I know that absolute positioned elements are removed from the flow, thus ignored by other elements.
I tried setting overflow:hidden;
on the parent div, but that didn't help, neither does the clearfix
.
My last resort will be JavaScript to reposition the two divs
accordingly, but for now I'll try and see if there exist a non-JavaScript way of doing this.
Question&Answers:
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