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Flexbox not giving equal width to elements

Attempting a flexbox nav that has up to 5 items and as little as 3, but it's not dividing the width equally between all the elements.

Fiddle

The tutorial I'm modeling this after is http://www.sitepoint.com/responsive-fluid-width-variable-item-navigation-css/

SASS

* { font-size: 16px; } .tabs { max-width: 1010px; width: 100%; height: 5rem; border-bottom: solid 1px grey; margin: 0 0 0 6.5rem; display: table; table-layout: fixed; } .tabs ul { margin: 0; display: flex; flex-direction: row; } .tabs ul li { flex-grow: 1; list-style: none; text-align: center; font-size: 1.313rem; background: blue; color: white; height: inherit; left: auto; vertical-align: top; text-align: left; padding: 20px 20px 20px 70px; border-top-left-radius: 20px; border: solid 1px blue; cursor: pointer; } .tabs ul li.active { background: white; color: blue; } .tabs ul li:before { content: ""; }

  • Pizza
  • Chicken Noodle Soup
  • Peanut Butter
  • Fish

give a min-width to your table like and set padding with vw units might help : jsfiddle.net/2nY9N/2 drop the flex-grow and just do flex:1; it will use defaut values for the 2 other properties

J
James Montagne

There is an important bit that is not mentioned in the article to which you linked and that is flex-basis. By default flex-basis is auto.

From the spec:

If the specified flex-basis is auto, the used flex basis is the value of the flex item’s main size property. (This can itself be the keyword auto, which sizes the flex item based on its contents.)

Each flex item has a flex-basis which is sort of like its initial size. Then from there, any remaining free space is distributed proportionally (based on flex-grow) among the items. With auto, that basis is the contents size (or defined size with width, etc.). As a result, items with bigger text within are being given more space overall in your example.

If you want your elements to be completely even, you can set flex-basis: 0. This will set the flex basis to 0 and then any remaining space (which will be all space since all basises are 0) will be proportionally distributed based on flex-grow.

li {
    flex-grow: 1;
    flex-basis: 0;
    /* ... */
}

This diagram from the spec does a pretty good job of illustrating the point.

And here is a working example with your fiddle.


This ruins wrapping for me on Safari.
The awesome thing about this answer is that you explain flex-basis with this example better than anywhere else on literally the entire internet. I'm going to contact MIT about giving you an honorary professorship.
Just to mention that flex: 1; is shorthand for combination of flex-grow: 1, flex-basis: 0.
Just in case if anyone wants to know in depth, I came across this great article on the web: css-tricks.com/flex-grow-is-weird
If this doesn't work for you, check if one item has different horizontal padding than another, then this solution doesn't make them the same width.
n
nnn

To create elements with equal width using Flex, you should set to your's child (flex elements):

flex-basis: 25%;
flex-grow: 0;

It will give to all elements in row 25% width. They will not grow and go one by one.


This is pretty awkward since it diminishes the benefit of flex entirely. If youre going to hardcode your column sizes theres easier ways to solve things.
that's not wrong at all .. if you wanna have boxes with same length and breaken down when row is fully occupied .. you can easily achieve that like this. Maybe set also min-width if you need a min width
@Kloar You're saying that like it's the only benefit of flexboxes... They can certainly still be beneficial when you need equal widths, e.g. for responsiveness. Also, it's not like flexboxes aren't easy?
Z
Zim

As explained in @James Montagne answer flex-basis: 0 will ensure the flexbox columns are distributed evenly which works in this case since the column content can wrap and isn't forcing the width. However, in cases where the width of the column content is forced (for example with image width or white-space: nowrap), the solution is to set min-width: 0...

li {
  flex-grow: 1;
  flex-basis: 0;
  min-width: 0;
}

https://codeply.com/p/sLZxZRFduI


min-width: 0; made my items same width to achieve overflow
R
Rohit Nishad

Solution:

flex: 1;

OR

.flex-child-items{
   flex-grow: 1;
} 

Explanation:

If you only put display: flex it just horizontally align all the item and the width is going to be sum of child's width (depend on the content or sometimes width property).

For example:

// A normal flex

++++++++++   ++++++++++   ++++++++++
+        +   +        +   +        +
+   A    +   +   B    +   +   C    +
+  10px  +   +  10px  +   +  10px  +
+        +   +        +   +        +
++++++++++   ++++++++++   ++++++++++

Now suppose you want to divide space equally to all of them. To do this add flex-grow: 1 to all children of flex. (In this example A,B and C)

.A, .B, .C {
    flex-grow: 1;
}

After this it looks like this:

++++++++++                              ++++++++++                              ++++++++++
+        +                              +        +                              +        +
+   A    +                              +   B    +                              +   C    +
+  10px  +                              +  10px  +                              +  10px  +
+        +                              +        +                              +        +
++++++++++                              ++++++++++                              ++++++++++

*BTW, if the above example box does not look like center, sorry for that but code work try it on the project.


A
Akshay Vijay Jain

Flex may not give equal widths to children in all cases.

use css grid for equal width elements.

.el{
 display: grid;
 grid-auto-flow: column;
 grid-auto-columns: 1fr
}

Reference https://css-tricks.com/equal-columns-with-flexbox-its-more-complicated-than-you-might-think/

If you wish to use CSS flex only, then there are few options

flex-basis: 100% to all the childs, this will be a close match. OR flex-basis: 0 this is less useful than first option