Flex Property Not Working In Ie
Solution 1:
IE has a problem parsing the flex
property.
Here are a few workarounds that have worked for me:
Use the long-hand properties instead of the shorthand.
Instead of something like this:
flex: 0 0 35%
.Try this:
flex-grow: 0
flex-shrink: 0
flex-basis: 35%
Make sure
flex-shrink
is enabled.So instead of this:
flex: 0 0 35%
Try this:
flex: 0 1 35%
(In other cases
flex-shrink
needs to be disabled: Flex item overlaps another item in IE11)
Careful with percentage and unitless values with
flex-basis
This may depend on your version of IE11. Behavior appears to vary.
Try these variations:
flex: 1 1 0
flex: 1 1 0px
flex: 1 1 0%
Beware! Certain css minifiers will replace 0px
with 0
, which can be a really annoying thing to debug (however, they won't change 0%
for some reason).
More details here:
- Image behavior within flexbox (rows embedded in columns)
- Why does shorthand flex property behave differently than long hand properties in IE?
Instead of
flex: 1
useflex: auto
(or add inflex-basis: auto
)If you're using
flex: 1
inflex-direction: row
(such as on larger screens), and you switch toflex-direction: column
in a media query (let's say for mobile devices), you may find that your flex items collapse.In your media query, add
flex-basis: auto
. This will override theflex-basis
value in theflex: 1
rule (which is usually0
,0px
or0%
, depending on the browser).Using
flex: auto
should also work, which is short for:flex-grow: 1
flex-shrink: 1
flex-basis: auto
- Use old-fashion
width
/height
properties instead offlex
.
Use
block
layout instead offlex
layout.You don't need to completely abandon flex layout. But for a particular container you may be able to get the job done with
display: block
instead ofdisplay: flex; flex-direction: column
.For example, in needing to use the padding trick to responsively embed a video in a flex item, the obstacle I faced was that some browsers don't work well with percentage padding (or margin) in a flex container.
To make it work I switched the
display
value on the flex item from this:/* a flex item, also a nested flex container */#footer-container > article { display: flex; flex-direction: column; }
to this:
#footer-container > article { display: block; }
Solution 2:
For me, using
flex: 11 auto;
instead of
flex: 1;
solved the flex issue on IE 11.
Solution 3:
Just use flex:1 0 auto;
. It will work.
Solution 4:
As in @Michael_B answer, limit the growth with Flexbox flex
property: flex: 0 1 (1/n - b)
taken in % value, where n
is the number of flex items in a row and b
is the gap that you want to see between flex items in IE.
On the flex items along with flex
property above use the max-width
property with percentage value of 1/n - b
.
In your case the generalized CSS for the flex item would be:
li {
// ... the remaining code from your snippet// Calculate the following manually and insert or use CSS preprocessor that does math for you.// See the formula explanation above.max-width: (your flex container max-width / 2) * 100% - b;
flex: 01 (your flex container max-width / 2) * 100% - b;
}
In actual case with 5 items / row there will be (1/5) * 100% - 1% = 19%
=> max-width: 19%
and flex: 0 1 19%;
.
Play with b
parameter to make flex items short enough to allow flex: wrap;
work.
Solution 5:
In my case, the CSS minifier rejects the px
unit of the last argument in -ms-flex
shorthand rule, I tried using %
unit and it works fine.
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