Make <body> fill entire screen?

余生颓废 提交于 2019-11-26 23:54:13
capdragon
html, body {
    margin: 0;
    height: 100%;
}

On our site we have pages where the content is static, and pages where it is loaded in with AJAX. On one page (a search page), there were cases when the AJAX results would more than fill the page, and cases where it would return no results. In order for the background image to fill the page in all cases we had to apply the following CSS:

html {
   margin: 0px;
   height: 100%;
   width: 100%;
}

body {
   margin: 0px;
   min-height: 100%;
   width: 100%;
}

height for the html and min-height for the body.

I had to apply 100% to both html and body.

Yvette Colomb

As none of the other answers worked for me, I decided to post this as an answer for others looking for a solution who also found the same problem. Both the html and body needed to be set with min-height or the gradient would not fill the body height.

I found Stephen P's comment to provide the correct answer to this.

html {
    /* To make use of full height of page*/
    min-height: 100%;
    margin: 0;
}
body {
    min-height: 100%;
    margin: 0;
}

When I have the html (or the html and body) height set to 100%,

html {
    height: 100%;
    margin: 0;
}
body {
    min-height: 100%;
    margin: 0;
}

Try using viewport (vh, vm) units of measure at the body level

html, body { margin: 0; padding: 0; } body { min-height: 100vh; }

Use vh units for horizontal margins, paddings, and borders on the body and subtract them from the min-height value.

I've had bizarre results using vh,vm units on elements within the body, especially when re-sizing.

I tried all the solutions above and I'm not discrediting any of them, but in my case, they didn't work.

For me, the problem was caused because the <header> tag had a margin-top of 5em and the <footer> had a margin-bottom of 5em. I removed them and instead put some padding (top and bottom, respectively). I'm not sure if replacing the margin was an ideal fix to the problem, but the point is that, if the first and last elements in your <body> has some margins, you might want to look into it and remove them.

My html and body tags had the following styles

body {
  line-height: 1;
  min-height: 100%;
  position: relative; }

html {
  min-height: 100%;
  background-color: #3c3c3c; }

If you have a border or padding, then the solution

html, body {
    margin: 0;
    height: 100%;
}
body {
    border: solid red 5px;
    border-radius: 2em;
}

produces the imperfect rendering

To get it right in the presence of a border or padding

use instead

html, body {
    margin: 0;
    height: 100%;
}
body {
    box-sizing: border-box;
    border: solid red 5px;
    border-radius: 2em;
}

as Martin pointed out, although overflow: hidden is not needed.

(2018 - tested with Chrome 69 and IE 11)

I think the largely correct way, is to set css to this:

html
{
    overflow: hidden;
}

body
{
    margin: 0;
    box-sizing: border-box;
}

html, body
{
    height: 100%;
}

This works for me:

<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
  <meta charset="utf-8" />
  <title> Fullscreen Div </title>
  <style>
  .test{
    position: fixed;
    width: 100%;
    height: 100%;
    left: 0;
    top: 0;
    z-index: 10;
  }
  </style>
</head>
<body>
  <div class='test'>Some text</div>
</body>
</html>
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