Why <div class="clear"></div> is used after multiple floating DIVS in a container DIV?
The height of an element is determined by its child elements (unless it is explicitly set). E.g.:
+------A------+
|+-----------+|
|| B ||
|+-----------+|
|+-----------+|
|| C ||
|+-----------+|
+-------------+
The height of A is determined by where the lower border of its child C is.
Now, floating elements do not count towards the height of their parents, they're taken out of the regular flow:
+------A------+
+--+---------++
| B |
+---------+
+---------+
| C |
+---------+
The A element is collapsed to a minimal height, because its two children are floated.
Clearing elements are introduced to restore the correct height:
+------A------+
| +---------+|
| | B ||
| +---------+|
| +---------+|
| | C ||
| +---------+|
|+-----D-----+|
+-------------+
The D element is a zero-height element with the clear
attribute set. That causes it to fall below the floated elements (it clears them). That causes A to have a regular child element to calculate its height by. That's the most typical use case at least.
The often better solution to introducing extra HTML elements is to set A to overflow: hidden
though. That has the effect of forcing a height calculation, which has the same effect of growing the height to the desired size. This solution may or may not have other side effects though.