Keep the middle item centered when side items have different widths
- Use three flex items in the container
- Set
flex: 1
to the first and last ones. This makes them grow equally to fill the available space left by the middle one. - Thus, the middle one will tend to be centered.
However, if the first or last item has a wide content, that flex item will also grow due to the new
min-width: auto
initial value.Note Chrome doesn't seem to implement this properly. However, you can set
min-width
to-webkit-max-content
or-webkit-min-content
and it will work too.Only in that case the middle element will be pushed out of the center.
.outer-wrapper {
display: flex;
}
.item {
background: lime;
margin: 5px;
}
.left.inner-wrapper, .right.inner-wrapper {
flex: 1;
display: flex;
min-width: -webkit-min-content; /* Workaround to Chrome bug */
}
.right.inner-wrapper {
justify-content: flex-end;
}
.animate {
animation: anim 5s infinite alternate;
}
@keyframes anim {
from { min-width: 0 }
to { min-width: 100vw; }
}
<div class="outer-wrapper">
<div class="left inner-wrapper">
<div class="item animate">Left</div>
</div>
<div class="center inner-wrapper">
<div class="item">Center</div>
</div>
<div class="right inner-wrapper">
<div class="item">Right</div>
</div>
</div>
<!-- Analogous to above --> <div class="outer-wrapper"><div class="left inner-wrapper"><div class="item">Left</div></div><div class="center inner-wrapper"><div class="item animate">Center</div></div><div class="right inner-wrapper"><div class="item">Right</div></div></div><div class="outer-wrapper"><div class="left inner-wrapper"><div class="item">Left</div></div><div class="center inner-wrapper"><div class="item">Center</div></div><div class="right inner-wrapper"><div class="item animate">Right</div></div></div>
If the left and right boxes would be exactly the same size, I get the desired effect. However when one of the two is a different size the centered box is not truly centered anymore. Is there anyone that can help me?
Here's a method using flexbox to center the middle item, regardless of the width of siblings.
Key features:
- pure CSS
- no absolute positioning
- no JS/jQuery
Use nested flex containers and auto
margins:
.container {
display: flex;
}
.box {
flex: 1;
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
.box:first-child > span { margin-right: auto; }
.box:last-child > span { margin-left: auto; }
/* non-essential */
.box {
align-items: center;
border: 1px solid #ccc;
background-color: lightgreen;
height: 40px;
}
p {
text-align: center;
margin: 5px 0 0 0;
}
<div class="container">
<div class="box"><span>short text</span></div>
<div class="box"><span>centered text</span></div>
<div class="box"><span>loooooooooooooooong text</span></div>
</div>
<p>↑<br>true center</p>
Here's how it works:
- The top-level div (
.container
) is a flex container. - Each child div (
.box
) is now a flex item. - Each
.box
item is givenflex: 1
in order to distribute container space equally (more details). - Now the items are consuming all space in the row and are equal width.
- Make each item a (nested) flex container and add
justify-content: center
. - Now each
span
element is a centered flex item. - Use flex
auto
margins to shift the outerspan
s left and right.
You could also forgo justify-content
and use auto
margins exclusively.
But justify-content
can work here because auto
margins always have priority.
8.1. Aligning with
auto
marginsPrior to alignment via
justify-content
andalign-self
, any positive free space is distributed to auto margins in that dimension.