CSS Layout - The display Property

CSS is the language we use to style an HTML document.
CSS describes how HTML elements should be displayed.
This tutorial will teach you CSS from basic to advanced.
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CSS Layout - The display Property

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CSS Layout - The display Property


The display property is the most important CSS property for controlling layout.

The display Property
The display property specifies if/how an element is displayed.
Every HTML element has a default display value depending on what type
of element it is. The default display value for most elements is block or
inline.
Click to show panel

This panel contains a <div> element, which is hidden by default (display: none).
It is styled with CSS, and we use JavaScript to show it (change it to (display: block).


Block-level Elements
A block-level element always starts on a new line and takes up the full width available
(stretches out to the left and right as far as it can).

The <div> element is a block-level element.
Examples of block-level elements:

<div>
<h1> - <h6>
<p>
<form>
<header>
<footer>
<section>


Inline Elements
An inline element does not start on a new line and only takes up as much width as necessary.
This is an inline <span> element
inside a paragraph.
Examples of inline elements:

<span>
<a>
<img>


Display: none;
display: none; is commonly used with JavaScript to hide
and show elements without deleting and recreating them. Take a look at our last
example on this page if you want to know how this can be achieved.
The <script> element uses display: none;
as default. 







Override The Default Display Value
As mentioned, every element has a default display value. However, you can
override this.
Changing an inline element to a block element, or vice versa, can be useful for
making the page look a specific way, and still follow the web standards.
A common example is making inline <li> elements for horizontal menus:

Example

li {  display: inline;}
Try it Yourself »


Note: Setting the display property of an element only changes how the element is displayed,
NOT what kind of element it is. So, an inline element with display: block; is not allowed
to have other block elements inside it.

The following example displays <span> elements as block elements:

Example

span {  display: block;}
Try it Yourself »

The following example displays <a> elements as block elements:

Example

a {  display: block;}
Try it Yourself »


Hide an Element - display:none or visibility:hidden?


display:none

Remove

visibility:hidden

Hide

Reset

Reset All




Hiding an element can be done by setting the display property to
none.
The element will be hidden, and the page will be displayed as if the element is not
there:

Example

h1.hidden {  display: none;}
Try it Yourself »

visibility:hidden; also hides an element.
However, the element will still take up the same space
as before. The element will be hidden, but still affect the layout:

Example

h1.hidden {  visibility: hidden;}
Try it Yourself »


More Examples
Differences between display: none; and visibility: hidden;
This example demonstrates display: none; versus visibility: hidden;
Using CSS together with JavaScript to show content
This example demonstrates how to use CSS and JavaScript to show an element on
click.


Test Yourself With Exercises

Exercise:
Hide the <h1> element. It should still take up the same space as before.


<style>
h1 {
: ;
}
</style>

<body>
<h1>This is a heading</h1>
<p>This is a paragraph</p>
<p>This is a paragraph</p>
</body>



Submit Answer »
Start the Exercise



CSS Display/Visibility Properties


Property
Description


display
Specifies how an element should be displayed


visibility
Specifies whether or not an element should be visible















+1

Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/css/css_displ ... bility.asp
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