The
display
property is the most important CSS property for controlling layout.The display Property
Thedisplay
property specifies if/how an element is displayed.Every HTML element has a default display value depending on what type of element it is. The default display value for most elements is
block
or
inline
.
Click to show panel
This panel contains a <div> element, which is hidden by default (
It is styled with CSS, and we use JavaScript to show it (change it to (
display: none
).It is styled with CSS, and we use JavaScript to show it (change it to (
display: block
).Block-level Elements
A block-level element always starts on a new line and takes up the full width available (stretches out to the left and right as far as it can).
The <div> element is a block-level element.
Examples of block-level elements:- <div>
- <h1> - <h6>
- <p>
- <form>
- <header>
- <footer>
- <section>
Inline Elements
An inline element does not start on a new line and only takes up as much width as necessary.This is an inline <span> element inside a paragraph.
Examples of inline elements:
- <span>
- <a>
- <img>
Display: none;
display: none;
is commonly used with JavaScript to hide
and show elements without deleting and recreating them. Take a look at our last
example on this page if you want to know how this can be achieved.The
<script>
element uses display: none;
as default.Override The Default Display Value
As mentioned, every element has a default display value. However, you can override this.Changing an inline element to a block element, or vice versa, can be useful for making the page look a specific way, and still follow the web standards.
A common example is making inline
<li>
elements for horizontal menus:Example
li {
display: inline;}
Note: Setting the display property of an element only changes how the element is displayed,
NOT what kind of element it is. So, an inline element with
The following example displays <span> elements as block elements:display: block;
is not allowed
to have other block elements inside it.Example
span {
display: block;}
Example
a {
display: block;}
Hide an Element - display:none or visibility:hidden?
display
property to
none
.
The element will be hidden, and the page will be displayed as if the element is not
there:
Example
h1.hidden {
display: none;}
visibility:hidden;
also hides an element.However, the element will still take up the same space as before. The element will be hidden, but still affect the layout:
Example
h1.hidden {
visibility: hidden;}
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