Draw the Other Half With Grid Lines
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Introduction
CSS Grid Layout (aka "Grid" or "CSS Grid"), is a two-dimensional grid-based layout system that, compared to any web layout system of the past, completely changes the way we design user interfaces. CSS has always been used to layout our web pages, but it's never done a very good job of it. First, we used tables, then floats, positioning and inline-block, but all of these methods were essentially hacks and left out a lot of important functionality (vertical centering, for instance). Flexbox is also a very great layout tool, but its one-directional flow has different use cases — and they actually work together quite well! Grid is the very first CSS module created specifically to solve the layout problems we've all been hacking our way around for as long as we've been making websites.
The intention of this guide is to present the Grid concepts as they exist in the latest version of the specification. So I won't be covering the out-of-date Internet Explorer syntax (even though you can absolutely use Grid in IE 11) or other historical hacks.
Basics & Browser Support
As of March 2017, most browsers shipped native, unprefixed support for CSS Grid: Chrome (including on Android), Firefox, Safari (including on iOS), and Opera. Internet Explorer 10 and 11 on the other hand support it, but it's an old implementation with an outdated syntax. The time to build with grid is now!
To get started you have to define a container element as a grid withdisplay: grid
, set the column and row sizes withgrid-template-columns
andgrid-template-rows
, and then place its child elements into the grid withgrid-column
andgrid-row
. Similarly to flexbox, the source order of the grid items doesn't matter. Your CSS can place them in any order, which makes it super easy to rearrange your grid with media queries. Imagine defining the layout of your entire page, and then completely rearranging it to accommodate a different screen width all with only a couple lines of CSS. Grid is one of the most powerful CSS modules ever introduced.
Desktop
Chrome | Firefox | IE | Edge | Safari |
---|---|---|---|---|
57 | 52 | 11* | 16 | 10.1 |
Mobile / Tablet
Android Chrome | Android Firefox | Android | iOS Safari |
---|---|---|---|
96 | 94 | 96 | 10.3 |
Important Terminology
Before diving into the concepts of Grid it's important to understand the terminology. Since the terms involved here are all kinda conceptually similar, it's easy to confuse them with one another if you don't first memorize their meanings defined by the Grid specification. But don't worry, there aren't many of them.
Grid Container
The element on whichdisplay: grid
is applied. It's the direct parent of all the grid items. In this examplecontainer
is the grid container.
<div class="container"> <div class="item item-1"> </div> <div class="item item-2"> </div> <div class="item item-3"> </div> </div>
Grid Line
The dividing lines that make up the structure of the grid. They can be either vertical ("column grid lines") or horizontal ("row grid lines") and reside on either side of a row or column. Here the yellow line is an example of a column grid line.
Grid Track
The space between two adjacent grid lines. You can think of them as the columns or rows of the grid. Here's the grid track between the second and third-row grid lines.
Grid Area
The total space surrounded by four grid lines. A grid area may be composed of any number of grid cells. Here's the grid area between row grid lines 1 and 3, and column grid lines 1 and 3.
Grid Item
The children (i.e.direct descendants) of the grid container. Here theitem
elements are grid items, butsub-item
isn't.
<div class="container"> <div class="item"> </div> <div class="item"> <p class="sub-item"> </p> </div> <div class="item"> </div> </div>
Grid Cell
The space between two adjacent row and two adjacent column grid lines. It's a single "unit" of the grid. Here's the grid cell between row grid lines 1 and 2, and column grid lines 2 and 3.
Grid Properties
Table of Contents of Grid Properties
Properties for the Parent
(Grid Container)
display
Defines the element as a grid container and establishes a new grid formatting context for its contents.
Values:
-
grid
– generates a block-level grid -
inline-grid
– generates an inline-level grid
.container { display: grid | inline-grid; }
The ability to pass grid parameters down through nested elements (aka subgrids) has been moved to level 2 of the CSS Grid specification. Here's a quick explanation.
grid-template-columns
grid-template-rows
Defines the columns and rows of the grid with a space-separated list of values. The values represent the track size, and the space between them represents the grid line.
Values:
-
<track-size>
– can be a length, a percentage, or a fraction of the free space in the grid (using thefr
unit) -
<line-name>
– an arbitrary name of your choosing
.container { grid-template-columns: ... ...; /* e.g. 1fr 1fr minmax(10px, 1fr) 3fr repeat(5, 1fr) 50px auto 100px 1fr */ grid-template-rows: ... ...; /* e.g. min-content 1fr min-content 100px 1fr max-content */ }
Grid lines are automatically assigned positive numbers from these assignments (-1 being an alternate for the very last row).
But you can choose to explicitly name the lines. Note the bracket syntax for the line names:
.container { grid-template-columns: [first] 40px [line2] 50px [line3] auto [col4-start] 50px [five] 40px [end]; grid-template-rows: [row1-start] 25% [row1-end] 100px [third-line] auto [last-line]; }
Note that a line can have more than one name. For example, here the second line will have two names: row1-end and row2-start:
.container { grid-template-rows: [row1-start] 25% [row1-end row2-start] 25% [row2-end]; }
If your definition contains repeating parts, you can use therepeat()
notation to streamline things:
.container { grid-template-columns: repeat(3, 20px [col-start]); }
Which is equivalent to this:
.container { grid-template-columns: 20px [col-start] 20px [col-start] 20px [col-start]; }
If multiple lines share the same name, they can be referenced by their line name and count.
.item { grid-column-start: col-start 2; }
Thefr
unit allows you to set the size of a track as a fraction of the free space of the grid container. For example, this will set each item to one third the width of the grid container:
.container { grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr; }
The free space is calculatedafter any non-flexible items. In this example the total amount of free space available to thefr
units doesn't include the 50px:
.container { grid-template-columns: 1fr 50px 1fr 1fr; }
grid-template-areas
Defines a grid template by referencing the names of the grid areas which are specified with thegrid-area
property. Repeating the name of a grid area causes the content to span those cells. A period signifies an empty cell. The syntax itself provides a visualization of the structure of the grid.
Values:
-
<grid-area-name>
– the name of a grid area specified withgrid-area
-
.
– a period signifies an empty grid cell -
none
– no grid areas are defined
.container { grid-template-areas: "<grid-area-name> | . | none | ..." "..."; }
Example:
.item-a { grid-area: header; } .item-b { grid-area: main; } .item-c { grid-area: sidebar; } .item-d { grid-area: footer; } .container { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 50px 50px 50px 50px; grid-template-rows: auto; grid-template-areas: "header header header header" "main main . sidebar" "footer footer footer footer"; }
That'll create a grid that's four columns wide by three rows tall. The entire top row will be composed of theheader area. The middle row will be composed of twomain areas, one empty cell, and onesidebar area. The last row is allfooter.
Each row in your declaration needs to have the same number of cells.
You can use any number of adjacent periods to declare a single empty cell. As long as the periods have no spaces between them they represent a single cell.
Notice that you're not naming lines with this syntax, just areas. When you use this syntax the lines on either end of the areas are actually getting named automatically. If the name of your grid area is foo , the name of the area's starting row line and starting column line will be foo-start, and the name of its last row line and last column line will be foo-end. This means that some lines might have multiple names, such as the far left line in the above example, which will have three names: header-start, main-start, and footer-start.
grid-template
A shorthand for settinggrid-template-rows
,grid-template-columns
, andgrid-template-areas
in a single declaration.
Values:
-
none
– sets all three properties to their initial values -
<grid-template-rows>
/<grid-template-columns
> – setsgrid-template-columns
andgrid-template-rows
to the specified values, respectively, and setsgrid-template-areas
tonone
.container { grid-template: none | <grid-template-rows> / <grid-template-columns>; }
It also accepts a more complex but quite handy syntax for specifying all three. Here's an example:
.container { grid-template: [row1-start] "header header header" 25px [row1-end] [row2-start] "footer footer footer" 25px [row2-end] / auto 50px auto; }
That's equivalent to this:
.container { grid-template-rows: [row1-start] 25px [row1-end row2-start] 25px [row2-end]; grid-template-columns: auto 50px auto; grid-template-areas: "header header header" "footer footer footer"; }
Sincegrid-template
doesn't reset theimplicit grid properties (grid-auto-columns
,grid-auto-rows
, andgrid-auto-flow
), which is probably what you want to do in most cases, it's recommended to use thegrid
property instead ofgrid-template
.
column-gap
row-gap
grid-column-gap
grid-row-gap
Specifies the size of the grid lines. You can think of it like setting the width of the gutters between the columns/rows.
Values:
-
<line-size>
– a length value
.container { /* standard */ column-gap: <line-size>; row-gap: <line-size>; /* old */ grid-column-gap: <line-size>; grid-row-gap: <line-size>; }
Example:
.container { grid-template-columns: 100px 50px 100px; grid-template-rows: 80px auto 80px; column-gap: 10px; row-gap: 15px; }
The gutters are only createdbetween the columns/rows, not on the outer edges.
Note: Thegrid-
prefix will be removed andgrid-column-gap
andgrid-row-gap
renamed tocolumn-gap
androw-gap
. The unprefixed properties are already supported in Chrome 68+, Safari 11.2 Release 50+, and Opera 54+.
gap
grid-gap
A shorthand forrow-gap
andcolumn-gap
Values:
-
<grid-row-gap>
<grid-column-gap>
– length values
.container { /* standard */ gap: <grid-row-gap> <grid-column-gap>; /* old */ grid-gap: <grid-row-gap> <grid-column-gap>; }
Example:
.container { grid-template-columns: 100px 50px 100px; grid-template-rows: 80px auto 80px; gap: 15px 10px; }
If norow-gap
is specified, it's set to the same value ascolumn-gap
Note: Thegrid-
prefix is deprecated (but who knows, may never actually be removed from browsers). Essentiallygrid-gap
renamed togap
. The unprefixed property is already supported in Chrome 68+, Safari 11.2 Release 50+, and Opera 54+.
justify-items
Aligns grid items along theinline (row) axis (as opposed toalign-items
which aligns along theblock (column) axis). This value applies to all grid items inside the container.
Values:
-
start
– aligns items to be flush with the start edge of their cell -
end
– aligns items to be flush with the end edge of their cell -
center
– aligns items in the center of their cell -
stretch
– fills the whole width of the cell (this is the default)
.container { justify-items: start | end | center | stretch; }
Examples:
.container { justify-items: start; }
.container { justify-items: end; }
.container { justify-items: center; }
.container { justify-items: stretch; }
This behavior can also be set on individual grid items via thejustify-self
property.
align-items
Aligns grid items along theblock (column) axis (as opposed tojustify-items
which aligns along theinline (row) axis). This value applies to all grid items inside the container.
Values:
-
stretch
– fills the whole height of the cell (this is the default) -
start
– aligns items to be flush with the start edge of their cell -
end
– aligns items to be flush with the end edge of their cell -
center
– aligns items in the center of their cell -
baseline
– align items along text baseline. There are modifiers tobaseline
—first baseline
andlast baseline
which will use the baseline from the first or last line in the case of multi-line text.
.container { align-items: start | end | center | stretch; }
Examples:
.container { align-items: start; }
.container { align-items: end; }
.container { align-items: center; }
.container { align-items: stretch; }
This behavior can also be set on individual grid items via thealign-self
property.
There are also modifier keywords safe
and unsafe
(usage is like align-items: safe end
). The safe
keyword means "try to align like this, but not if it means aligning an item such that it moves into inaccessible overflow area", while unsafe
will allow moving content into inaccessible areas ("data loss").
place-items
place-items
sets both thealign-items
andjustify-items
properties in a single declaration.
Values:
-
<align-items>
/<justify-items>
– The first value setsalign-items
, the second valuejustify-items
. If the second value is omitted, the first value is assigned to both properties.
For more details, seealign-items
andjustify-items
.
This can be very useful for super quick multi-directional centering:
.center { display: grid; place-items: center; }
place-content
place-content
sets both thealign-content
andjustify-content
properties in a single declaration.
Values:
-
<align-content>
/<justify-content>
– The first value setsalign-content
, the second valuejustify-content
. If the second value is omitted, the first value is assigned to both properties.
All major browsers except Edge support theplace-content
shorthand property.
For more details, seealign-content
andjustify-content
.
grid-auto-columns
grid-auto-rows
Specifies the size of any auto-generated grid tracks (akaimplicit grid tracks). Implicit tracks get created when there are more grid items than cells in the grid or when a grid item is placed outside of the explicit grid. (see The Difference Between Explicit and Implicit Grids)
Values:
-
<track-size>
– can be a length, a percentage, or a fraction of the free space in the grid (using thefr
unit)
.container { grid-auto-columns: <track-size> ...; grid-auto-rows: <track-size> ...; }
To illustrate how implicit grid tracks get created, think about this:
.container { grid-template-columns: 60px 60px; grid-template-rows: 90px 90px; }
This creates a 2 x 2 grid.
But now imagine you usegrid-column
andgrid-row
to position your grid items like this:
.item-a { grid-column: 1 / 2; grid-row: 2 / 3; } .item-b { grid-column: 5 / 6; grid-row: 2 / 3; }
We told .item-b to start on column line 5 and end at column line 6,but we never defined a column line 5 or 6. Because we referenced lines that don't exist, implicit tracks with widths of 0 are created to fill in the gaps. We can usegrid-auto-columns
andgrid-auto-rows
to specify the widths of these implicit tracks:
.container { grid-auto-columns: 60px; }
grid-auto-flow
If you have grid items that you don't explicitly place on the grid, theauto-placement algorithm kicks in to automatically place the items. This property controls how the auto-placement algorithm works.
Values:
-
row
– tells the auto-placement algorithm to fill in each row in turn, adding new rows as necessary (default) -
column
– tells the auto-placement algorithm to fill in each column in turn, adding new columns as necessary -
dense
– tells the auto-placement algorithm to attempt to fill in holes earlier in the grid if smaller items come up later
.container { grid-auto-flow: row | column | row dense | column dense; }
Note thatdense only changes the visual order of your items and might cause them to appear out of order, which is bad for accessibility.
Examples:
Consider this HTML:
<section class="container"> <div class="item-a">item-a</div> <div class="item-b">item-b</div> <div class="item-c">item-c</div> <div class="item-d">item-d</div> <div class="item-e">item-e</div> </section>
You define a grid with five columns and two rows, and setgrid-auto-flow
torow
(which is also the default):
.container { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 60px 60px 60px 60px 60px; grid-template-rows: 30px 30px; grid-auto-flow: row; }
When placing the items on the grid, you only specify spots for two of them:
.item-a { grid-column: 1; grid-row: 1 / 3; } .item-e { grid-column: 5; grid-row: 1 / 3; }
Because we setgrid-auto-flow
torow
, our grid will look like this. Notice how the three items we didn't place (item-b,item-c anditem-d) flow across the available rows:
If we instead setgrid-auto-flow
tocolumn
,item-b,item-c anditem-d flow down the columns:
.container { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 60px 60px 60px 60px 60px; grid-template-rows: 30px 30px; grid-auto-flow: column; }
grid
A shorthand for setting all of the following properties in a single declaration:grid-template-rows
,grid-template-columns
,grid-template-areas
,grid-auto-rows
,grid-auto-columns
, andgrid-auto-flow
(Note: You can only specify the explicit or the implicit grid properties in a single grid declaration).
Values:
-
none
– sets all sub-properties to their initial values. -
<grid-template>
– works the same as thegrid-template
shorthand. -
<grid-template-rows> / [ auto-flow && dense? ] <grid-auto-columns>?
– setsgrid-template-rows
to the specified value. If theauto-flow
keyword is to the right of the slash, it setsgrid-auto-flow
tocolumn
. If thedense
keyword is specified additionally, the auto-placement algorithm uses a "dense" packing algorithm. Ifgrid-auto-columns
is omitted, it is set toauto
. -
[ auto-flow && dense? ] <grid-auto-rows>? / <grid-template-columns>
– setsgrid-template-columns
to the specified value. If theauto-flow
keyword is to the left of the slash, it setsgrid-auto-flow
torow
. If thedense
keyword is specified additionally, the auto-placement algorithm uses a "dense" packing algorithm. Ifgrid-auto-rows
is omitted, it is set toauto
.
Examples:
The following two code blocks are equivalent:
.container { grid: 100px 300px / 3fr 1fr; } .container { grid-template-rows: 100px 300px; grid-template-columns: 3fr 1fr; }
The following two code blocks are equivalent:
.container { grid: auto-flow / 200px 1fr; } .container { grid-auto-flow: row; grid-template-columns: 200px 1fr; }
The following two code blocks are equivalent:
.container { grid: auto-flow dense 100px / 1fr 2fr; } .container { grid-auto-flow: row dense; grid-auto-rows: 100px; grid-template-columns: 1fr 2fr; }
And the following two code blocks are equivalent:
.container { grid: 100px 300px / auto-flow 200px; } .container { grid-template-rows: 100px 300px; grid-auto-flow: column; grid-auto-columns: 200px; }
It also accepts a more complex but quite handy syntax for setting everything at once. You specifygrid-template-areas
,grid-template-rows
andgrid-template-columns
, and all the other sub-properties are set to their initial values. What you're doing is specifying the line names and track sizes inline with their respective grid areas. This is easiest to describe with an example:
.container { grid: [row1-start] "header header header" 1fr [row1-end] [row2-start] "footer footer footer" 25px [row2-end] / auto 50px auto; }
That's equivalent to this:
.container { grid-template-areas: "header header header" "footer footer footer"; grid-template-rows: [row1-start] 1fr [row1-end row2-start] 25px [row2-end]; grid-template-columns: auto 50px auto; }
Properties for the Children
(Grid Items)
float
,display: inline-block
,display: table-cell
,vertical-align
andcolumn-*
properties have no effect on a grid item.
grid-column-start
grid-column-end
grid-row-start
grid-row-end
Determines a grid item's location within the grid by referring to specific grid lines.grid-column-start
/grid-row-start
is the line where the item begins, andgrid-column-end
/grid-row-end
is the line where the item ends.
Values:
-
<line>
– can be a number to refer to a numbered grid line, or a name to refer to a named grid line -
span <number>
– the item will span across the provided number of grid tracks -
span <name>
– the item will span across until it hits the next line with the provided name -
auto
– indicates auto-placement, an automatic span, or a default span of one
.item { grid-column-start: <number> | <name> | span <number> | span <name> | auto; grid-column-end: <number> | <name> | span <number> | span <name> | auto; grid-row-start: <number> | <name> | span <number> | span <name> | auto; grid-row-end: <number> | <name> | span <number> | span <name> | auto; }
Examples:
.item-a { grid-column-start: 2; grid-column-end: five; grid-row-start: row1-start; grid-row-end: 3; }
.item-b { grid-column-start: 1; grid-column-end: span col4-start; grid-row-start: 2; grid-row-end: span 2; }
If nogrid-column-end
/grid-row-end
is declared, the item will span 1 track by default.
Items can overlap each other. You can usez-index
to control their stacking order.
grid-column
grid-row
Shorthand forgrid-column-start
+grid-column-end
, andgrid-row-start
+grid-row-end
, respectively.
Values:
-
<start-line>
/<end-line>
– each one accepts all the same values as the longhand version, including span
.item { grid-column: <start-line> / <end-line> | <start-line> / span <value>; grid-row: <start-line> / <end-line> | <start-line> / span <value>; }
Example:
.item-c { grid-column: 3 / span 2; grid-row: third-line / 4; }
If no end line value is declared, the item will span 1 track by default.
grid-area
Gives an item a name so that it can be referenced by a template created with thegrid-template-areas
property. Alternatively, this property can be used as an even shorter shorthand forgrid-row-start
+grid-column-start
+grid-row-end
+grid-column-end
.
Values:
-
<name>
– a name of your choosing -
<row-start>
/<column-start>
/<row-end>
/<column-end>
– can be numbers or named lines
.item { grid-area: <name> | <row-start> / <column-start> / <row-end> / <column-end>; }
Examples:
As a way to assign a name to the item:
.item-d { grid-area: header; }
As the short-shorthand forgrid-row-start
+grid-column-start
+grid-row-end
+grid-column-end
:
.item-d { grid-area: 1 / col4-start / last-line / 6; }
justify-self
Aligns a grid item inside a cell along theinline (row) axis (as opposed toalign-self
which aligns along theblock (column) axis). This value applies to a grid item inside a single cell.
Values:
-
start
– aligns the grid item to be flush with the start edge of the cell -
end
– aligns the grid item to be flush with the end edge of the cell -
center
– aligns the grid item in the center of the cell -
stretch
– fills the whole width of the cell (this is the default)
.item { justify-self: start | end | center | stretch; }
Examples:
.item-a { justify-self: start; }
.item-a { justify-self: end; }
.item-a { justify-self: center; }
.item-a { justify-self: stretch; }
To set alignment forall the items in a grid, this behavior can also be set on the grid container via thejustify-items
property.
align-self
Aligns a grid item inside a cell along theblock (column) axis (as opposed tojustify-self
which aligns along theinline (row) axis). This value applies to the content inside a single grid item.
Values:
-
start
– aligns the grid item to be flush with the start edge of the cell -
end
– aligns the grid item to be flush with the end edge of the cell -
center
– aligns the grid item in the center of the cell -
stretch
– fills the whole height of the cell (this is the default)
.item { align-self: start | end | center | stretch; }
Examples:
.item-a { align-self: start; }
.item-a { align-self: end; }
.item-a { align-self: center; }
.item-a { align-self: stretch; }
To alignall the items in a grid, this behavior can also be set on the grid container via thealign-items
property.
place-self
place-self
sets both thealign-self
andjustify-self
properties in a single declaration.
Values:
-
auto
– The "default" alignment for the layout mode. -
<align-self>
/<justify-self>
– The first value setsalign-self
, the second valuejustify-self
. If the second value is omitted, the first value is assigned to both properties.
Examples:
.item-a { place-self: center; }
.item-a { place-self: center stretch; }
All major browsers except Edge support theplace-self
shorthand property.
Special Units & Functions
fr units
You'll likely end up using a lot of fractional units in CSS Grid, like 1fr
. They essentially mean "portion of the remaining space". So a declaration like:
grid-template-columns: 1fr 3fr;
Means, loosely, 25% 75%
. Except that those percentage values are much more firm than fractional units are. For example, if you added padding to those percentage-based columns, now you've broken 100% width (assuming a content-box
box model). Fractional units also much more friendly in combination with other units, as you can imagine:
grid-template-columns: 50px min-content 1fr;
Sizing Keywords
When sizing rows and columns, you can use all the lengths you are used to, likepx
, rem, %, etc, but you also have keywords:
-
min-content
: the minimum size of the content. Imagine a line of text like "The very long hotdog.", the min-content is likely the width of the world "The". -
max-content
: the maximum size of the content. Imagine the sentence above, themax-content
is the length of the whole sentence. -
auto
: this keyword is a lot likefr
units, except that they "lose" the fight in sizing againstfr
units when allocating the remaining space. -
fit-content
: use the space available, but never less than min-content and never more thanmax-content
. - fractional units: see above
Sizing Functions
- The
minmax()
function does exactly what it seems like: it sets a minimum and maximum value for what the length is able to be. This is useful for in combination with relative units. Like you may want a column to be only able to shrink so far. This is extremely useful and probably what you want:
grid-template-columns: minmax(100px, 1fr) 3fr;
- The
min()
function. - The
max()
function.
The repeat() Function and Keywords
Therepeat()
function can save some typing:
grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr; /* easier: */ grid-template-columns: repeat(8, 1fr); /* especially when: */ grid-template-columns: repeat(8, minmax(10px, 1fr));
But repeat()
can get extra fancy when combined with keywords:
-
auto-fill
: Fit as many possible columns as possible on a row, even if they are empty. -
auto-fit:
Fit whatever columns there are into the space. Prefer expanding columns to fill space rather than empty columns.
This bears the most famous snippet in all of CSS Grid and one of the all-time great CSS tricks:
grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fit, minmax(250px, 1fr));
The difference between the keywords is spelled out in detail here.
Masonry
An experimental feature of CSS grid is masonry layout. Note that there are lots of approaches to CSS masonry, but mostly of them are trickery and either have major downsides or aren't what you quite expect.
The spec has an official way now, and this is behind a flag in Firefox:
.container { display: grid; grid-template-columns: repeat(4, 1fr); grid-template-rows: masonry; }
See Rachel's article for a deep dive.
Subgrid
Subgrid is an extremely useful feature of grids that allows grid items to have a grid of their own that inherits grid lines from the parent grid.
.parent-grid { display: grid; grid-template-columns: repeat(9, 1fr); } .grid-item { grid-column: 2 / 7; display: grid; grid-template-columns: subgrid; } .child-of-grid-item { /* gets to participate on parent grid! */ grid-column: 3 / 6; }
This is only supported in Firefox right now, but it really needs to get everywhere.
It's also useful to know about display: contents;
. This is not the same as subgrid, but it can be a useful tool sometimes in a similar fashion.
<div class="grid-parent"> <div class="grid-item"></div> <div class="grid-item"></div> <ul style="display: contents;"> <!-- These grid-items get to participate on the same grid!--> <li class="grid-item"></li> <li class="grid-item"></li> </ul> </div>
Fluid Columns Snippet
Fluid width columns that break into more or less columns as space is available, with no media queries!
.grid { display: grid; grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(200px, 1fr)); /* This is better for small screens, once min() is better supported */ /* grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(min(200px, 100%), 1fr)); */ gap: 1rem; }
Animation
According to the CSS Grid Layout Module Level 1 specification, there are 5 animatable grid properties:
-
grid-gap
,grid-row-gap
,grid-column-gap
as length, percentage, or calc. -
grid-template-columns
,grid-template-rows
as a simple list of length, percentage, or calc, provided the only differences are the values of the length, percentage, or calc components in the list.
As of this writing, only the animation of(grid-)gap
,(grid-)row-gap
,(grid-)column-gap
is implemented in any of the tested browsers.
Browser | (grid-)gap ,(grid-)row-gap ,(grid-)column-gap | grid-template-columns | grid-template-rows |
---|---|---|---|
Firefox | supported ✅ 53+ | supported ✅ 66+ | supported ✅ 66+ |
Safari 12.0 | not supported ❌ | not supported ❌ | not supported ❌ |
Chrome | supported ✅ 66+ | not supported ❌ | not supported ❌ |
Chrome for Android 66+, Opera Mini 33+ | supported ✅ | not supported ❌ | not supported ❌ |
Edge | supported ✅ 16+ | not supported ❌ | not supported ❌ |
Draw the Other Half With Grid Lines
Source: https://css-tricks.com/snippets/css/complete-guide-grid/