I've used this to stick my footer to the bottom and it worked for me:
HTML
<body>
<div class="allButFooter">
<!-- Your page's content goes here, including header, nav, aside, everything -->
</div>
<footer>
<!-- Footer content -->
</footer>
</body>
That's the only modification you have to do in the HTML, add that div
with the "allButFooter"
class. I did it with all the pages, those that were so short, I knew the footer wouldn't stick to the bottom, and also pages long enough that I already knew I had to scroll. I did this, so I could see that it works ok in the case that a page's content is dynamic.
CSS
.allButFooter {
min-height: calc(100vh - 40px);
}
The "allButFooter"
class has a min-height
value that depends on the viewport's height (100vh
means 100% of the viewport height) and the footer's height, that I already knew was 40px
.
That's all I did, and it worked perfectly for me. I haven't tried it in every browser, just Firefox, Chrome and Edge, and the results were as I wanted. The footer sticks to the bottom, and you don't have to mess with z-index, position, or any other properties. The position of every element in my document was the default position, I didn't change it to absolute or fixed or anything.
Working with responsive design
Here's something I would like to clear out. This solution, with the same Footer that was 40px high didn't work as I expected when I was working in a responsive design using Twitter-Bootstrap
. I had to modify the value I was substracting in the function:
.allButFooter {
min-height: calc(100vh - 95px);
}
This is probably because Twitter-Bootstrap
comes with its own margins and paddings, so that's why I had to adjust that value.
I hope this is of some use for you guys! At least, it's a simple solution to try, and it doesn't involve making big changes to the whole document.
flexbox
. – Marijke Luttekes