What's the difference between margin:auto and justify-content / align-items center?

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时光取名叫无心
时光取名叫无心 2020-12-10 13:10

To center both horizontally and vertically simultaneously, there are two simple options:

First

.outer {
  display:flex;
}
.inner {
  margin:auto;
}
<         


        
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  • 2020-12-10 14:05

    In your first example...

    .outer {
      display: flex;
    }
    .inner {
      margin: auto;
    }
    

    ... the auto margin applies only to the flex item and centers that one flex item within the container.

    In your second example...

    .outer {
      display: flex;
      justify-content: center;
      align-items: center;
    }
    

    You are centering items from the container level. This code will center all items.

    Also, keep in mind, if you use both methods at the same time, margin: auto should prevail.

    8.1. Aligning with auto margins

    Prior to alignment via justify-content and align-self, any positive free space is distributed to auto margins in that dimension

    If free space is distributed to auto margins, the alignment properties will have no effect in that dimension because the margins will have stolen all the free space left over after flexing.

    But the most important difference, for practical purposes, may be the behavior when a flex item exceeds the size of the container. When this happens, you lose access to parts of the item when using the container-level code. The item disappears from the screen and is not accessible via scroll.

    To overcome this problem, use margin: auto for centering to work properly.

    Here's a more complete explanation:

    • Can't scroll to top of flex item that is overflowing container
    • Center a flex item vertically and horizontally (see Box #56)

    IE Bugs:

    • Flex auto margin not working in IE10/11
    • Flexbox auto margins don't work with justify-content: center in IE
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