问题
Short story:
jsfiddle here. The behavior is consistently wrong in Chrome 21, Firefox 15 and IE9, which makes me think I'm misunderstanding something about the CSS spec.
Longer story:
I want to center an image vertically using line-height. I've set the height of the image container equal to the line-height, I've reset margins, paddings and borders for all elements, yet the image is 2 pixels below where it should be. This happens whether the image is smaller than the container, or larger than it (in which case I used max-width: 100; max-height: 100%
to size it down).
The image has an even number of pixels in both cases. I wouldn't care that much for images smaller than the container, but for images that are larger, a 2-pixel line from the container background will bleed through at the top of the image.
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>Images centered vertically with line-height have center miscalculated by 2 pixels</title>
<style type="text/css">
* { margin: 0; padding: 0; border: 0px solid cyan; } /* reset all margins, paddings and borders */
html {
font-size: 16px;
line-height: normal;
}
body {
line-height: 100%;
background: gray;
}
.img-wrapper-center {
width: 400px;
height: 200px; /* necessary, besides line-height, if images are taller than it */
line-height: 200px; /* must be equal to line-height */
text-align: center;
background: white;
}
.img-wrapper-center img {
vertical-align: middle;
/* Comment the two rules below. The first image will still be mis-aligned by two pixels, but the second will not. */
max-width: 100%; max-height: 100%; /* force scaling down large images */
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div class="img-wrapper-center" id="div1">
<img src="http://gravatar.com/avatar" id="img1"/> <!-- 80x80 -->
</div>
<div class="img-wrapper-center" id="div2" style="background: green">
<img src="http://www.w3.org/html/logo/img/class-header-semantics.jpg" id="img2" /> <!-- 495x370 -->
</div>
<p>
Note how the second image is misaligned down by two pixels.
The first one is mis-aligned the same way. Sizes and coordinates are below.
</p>
<script>
document.writeln('div1 top: ' + document.getElementById('div1').offsetTop + '<br/>');
document.writeln('image 1 height: ' + document.getElementById('img1').offsetHeight + '<br/>');
document.writeln('div1 height: ' + (document.getElementById('div1').offsetHeight) + '<br/>');
document.writeln('image 1 top should be at: ' + (document.getElementById('div1').offsetHeight - document.getElementById('img1').height) / 2 + '<br/>');
document.writeln('image 1 top actually is at: ' + document.getElementById('img1').offsetTop + '<br/>');
document.writeln('div2 top: ' + document.getElementById('div2').offsetTop + '<br/>');
document.writeln('img2 top: ' + document.getElementById('img2').offsetTop + '<br/>');
</script>
</body>
</html>
回答1:
You have to set zero font-size
for container div
elements.
Because images are displayed as inline elements they are affected by text in container div
. Zero font-size
fixes this:
.img-wrapper-center
{
font-size:0;
}
Here is fiddle: http://jsfiddle.net/bZBsR/
回答2:
If you also have text inside this div you can use this property:
.img-wrapper-center {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
Here is fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/rjurado/yvanL4k1/2/
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/12259736/why-are-images-centered-vertically-with-line-height-positioned-2-pixels-below