width:auto for <input> fields
An <input>
's width is generated from its size
attribute. The default size
is what's driving the auto width.
You could try width:100%
as illustrated in my example below.
Doesn't fill width:
<form action='' method='post' style='width:200px;background:khaki'>
<input style='width:auto' />
</form>
Fills width:
<form action='' method='post' style='width:200px;background:khaki'>
<input style='width:100%' />
</form>
Smaller size, smaller width:
<form action='' method='post' style='width:200px;background:khaki'>
<input size='5' />
</form>
UPDATE
Here's the best I could do after a few minutes. It's 1px off in FF, Chrome, and Safari, and perfect in IE. (The problem is #^&* IE applies borders differently than everyone else so it's not consistent.)
<div style='padding:30px;width:200px;background:red'>
<form action='' method='post' style='width:200px;background:blue;padding:3px'>
<input size='' style='width:100%;margin:-3px;border:2px inset #eee' />
<br /><br />
<input size='' style='width:100%' />
</form>
</div>
"Is there a definition of exactly what width:auto does mean? The CSS spec seems vague to me, but maybe I missed the relevant section."
No one actually answered the above part of the original poster's question.
Here's the answer: http://www.456bereastreet.com/archive/201112/the_difference_between_widthauto_and_width100/
As long as the value of width is auto, the element can have horizontal margin, padding and border without becoming wider than its container...
On the other hand, if you specify width:100%, the element’s total width will be 100% of its containing block plus any horizontal margin, padding and border... This may be what you want, but most likely it isn’t.
To visualise the difference I made an example: http://www.456bereastreet.com/lab/width-auto/
Because input
's width
is controlled by it's size
attribute, this is how I initialize an input
width
according to its content:
<input type="text" class="form-list-item-name" [size]="myInput.value.length" #myInput>