Rachel Andrew on why the CSS is Awesome meme is actually a good thing and how to fix it
[T]he problem highlighted by the CSS is Awesome meme […] is an issue of overflow. You have made a fixed width container and are trying to put content into that container which is too big, what do you want CSS to do here?
CSS by default will do what you see in the meme because to do anything else would cause data loss, which [in] CSS terms means that some of your content vanishes.
We try and avoid data loss because if something on your page vanishes at certain screen sizes – because of overlap, or it going off the side of the screen, you may be unaware of it. A quick eyeballing of the page may not cause something missing to jump out at you. You will tend to spot the messy overflow though.
A good example of this design pattern can be seen in the Box Alignment specification, with the safe and unsafe alignment keywords. Safe alignment, means that your chosen alignment method won’t be used if it causes data loss, unsafe means that data loss may happen.
[…]
Better ways to stop content just “honking out of the box”
The author of the meme wondered why the box didn’t grow to fit the content. However if you give something a fixed size in CSS, it will respect that size. What the author really wanted was to make the box
min-content
sized. With a box that has a width ofmin-content
the box will grow as big as it needs to be to contain the content, with all soft-wrapping opportunities taken, but no bigger.If instead, you want to make the box not wrap at all, then give it a width of
max-content
. The text will then display all as one line and take no soft-wrapping opportunities.Perhaps you need to have the box that fixed width, but don’t mind if it grows taller. In that case use
overflow-wrap: break-word
.Take a look at [this CodePen] for all your awesome possibilities.