Here is a technique to align inline elements inside a parent, horizontally and vertically at the same time:
Vertical Alignment
1) In this approach, we create an inline-block
(pseudo-)element as the first (or last) child of the parent, and set its height
property to 100%
to take all the height of its parent.
2) Also, adding vertical-align: middle
keeps the inline(-block) elements at the middle of the line space. So, we add that CSS declaration to the first-child and our element (the image) both.
3) Finally, in order to remove the white space character between inline(-block) elements, we could set the font size of the parent to zero by font-size: 0;
.
Note: I used Nicolas Gallagher's image replacement technique in the following.
What are the benefits?
- The container (parent) can have dynamic dimensions.
There's no need to specify the dimensions of the image element explicitly.
We can easily use this approach to align a <div>
element vertically as well; which may have a dynamic content (height and/or width). But note that you have to re-set the font-size
property of the div
to display the inside text. Online Demo.
<div class="container">
<div id="element"> ... </div>
</div>
.container {
height: 300px;
text-align: center; /* align the inline(-block) elements horizontally */
font: 0/0 a; /* remove the gap between inline(-block) elements */
}
.container:before { /* create a full-height inline block pseudo=element */
content: ' ';
display: inline-block;
vertical-align: middle; /* vertical alignment of the inline element */
height: 100%;
}
#element {
display: inline-block;
vertical-align: middle; /* vertical alignment of the inline element */
font: 16px/1 Arial sans-serif; /* <-- reset the font property */
}
The output
Responsive Container
This section is not going to answer the question as the OP already knows how to create a responsive container. However, I'll explain how it works.
In order to make the height of a container element changes with its width (respecting the aspect ratio), we could use a percentage value for top/bottom padding
property.
A percentage value on top/bottom padding or margins is relative to the width of the containing block.
For instance:
.responsive-container {
width: 60%;
padding-top: 60%; /* 1:1 Height is the same as the width */
padding-top: 100%; /* width:height = 60:100 or 3:5 */
padding-top: 45%; /* = 60% * 3/4 , width:height = 4:3 */
padding-top: 33.75%; /* = 60% * 9/16, width:height = 16:9 */
}
Here is the Online Demo. Comment out the lines from the bottom and resize the panel to see the effect.
Also, we could apply the padding
property to a dummy child or :before
/:after
pseudo-element to achieve the same result. But note that in this case, the percentage value on padding
is relative to the width of the .responsive-container
itself.
<div class="responsive-container">
<div class="dummy"></div>
</div>
.responsive-container { width: 60%; }
.responsive-container .dummy {
padding-top: 100%; /* 1:1 square */
padding-top: 75%; /* w:h = 4:3 */
padding-top: 56.25%; /* w:h = 16:9 */
}
Demo #1.
Demo #2 (Using :after
pseudo-element)
Adding the content
Using padding-top
property causes a huge space at the top or bottom of the content, inside the container.
In order to fix that, we have wrap the content by a wrapper element, remove that element from document normal flow by using absolute positioning, and finally expand the wrapper (bu using top
, right
, bottom
and left
properties) to fill the entire space of its parent, the container.
Here we go:
.responsive-container {
width: 60%;
position: relative;
}
.responsive-container .wrapper {
position: absolute;
top: 0; right: 0; bottom: 0; left: 0;
}
Here is the Online Demo.
Getting all together
<div class="responsive-container">
<div class="dummy"></div>
<div class="img-container">
<img src="http://placehold.it/150x150" alt="">
</div>
</div>
.img-container {
text-align:center; /* Align center inline elements */
font: 0/0 a; /* Hide the characters like spaces */
}
.img-container:before {
content: ' ';
display: inline-block;
vertical-align: middle;
height: 100%;
}
.img-container img {
vertical-align: middle;
display: inline-block;
}
Here is the WORKING DEMO.
Obviously, you could avoid using ::before
pseudo-element for browser compatibility, and create an element as the first child of the .img-container
:
<div class="img-container">
<div class="centerer"></div>
<img src="http://placehold.it/150x150" alt="">
</div>
.img-container .centerer {
display: inline-block;
vertical-align: middle;
height: 100%;
}
UPDATED DEMO.
Using max-*
properties
In order to keep the image inside of the box in lower width, you could set max-height
and max-width
property on the image:
.img-container img {
vertical-align: middle;
display: inline-block;
max-height: 100%; /* <-- Set maximum height to 100% of its parent */
max-width: 100%; /* <-- Set maximum width to 100% of its parent */
}
Here is the UPDATED DEMO.