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csscss-gridword-wrap

How can I force this CSS grid to wrap to a new line without specifying minmax sizes?


I come from a heavy div/float background to build responsive sites (e.g. Bootstrap 3, Foundation) and used Flex box briefly but have been attempting to use Grid everywhere since it's been really great at solving a number of problems. I seem to run into "simple" problems like this all too often and feel like I'm missing some basics, and can't find the answer in docs. Anyways, to the code.

Given a grid setup like so:

display: grid;
grid-auto-columns: max-content;
grid-auto-flow: column;

the content doesn't wrap to a new row once it's filled the width of its parent element. Ideally, I'd be able to have it auto-wrap without pre-defining exact pixel measurements such as grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(300px, 1fr));. This doesn't seem to work for my needs – I'd have to define multiple grid-template-columns measurements for different viewports, and know what a good width is for the items inside the columns. I'd much rather say grid-auto-columns: max-content; and then have items simply wrap to a new line.

Is this possible with grid? What am I missing/misunderstanding?

See Codepen with a full example demonstrating the problem: https://codepen.io/csdv/pen/OrbrzJ


Solution

  • I don't see how this is possible with the current iteration of CSS Grid.

    As you've already discovered, you would at least need to define a fixed minimum width on the columns, in order to force a wrap at some point.

    Unfortunately, with automatic repetitions, the minimum length cannot be auto, min-content or max-content alone, because that is forbidden in the specification.

    Here's as close as you can get with Grid, as far as I can tell:

    .btn-tabs {
      display: grid;
      grid-template-columns: repeat(auto-fill, minmax(75px, max-content));
      width: 20rem;
    }
    
    /* original demo styles */
    .btn {
      font-family: "Arial", sans-serif;
      border-bottom: 4px solid #77aaee;
      color: #77aaee;
      padding: .6rem;
      text-decoration: none;
    }
    <div class="btn-tabs">
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 1</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 2</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 3</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 4</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 5</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 6</a>
    </div>

    Flexbox may be a good alternative, as it seems to work with your requirements:

    .btn-tabs {
      display: flex;
      flex-wrap: wrap;
      width: 20rem;
    }
    
    /* original demo styles */
    /* notice no width defined on flex items, but they wrap anyway */
    .btn {
      font-family: "Arial", sans-serif;
      border-bottom: 4px solid #77aaee;
      color: #77aaee;
      padding: .6rem;
      text-decoration: none;
    }
    <div class="btn-tabs">
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 1</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 2</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 3</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 4</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 5</a>
      <a class="btn" href="#">Button 6</a>
    </div>