Flex items not respecting margins and box-sizing: border-box

Keep in mind that box-sizing: border-box brings padding and borders into the width / height calculation, but not margins. Margins are always calculated separately.

The box-sizing property takes two values:

  • content-box
  • border-box

It does not offer padding-box or margin-box.

Consider those terms when referring to the CSS Box Model.

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source: W3C

3.1. Changing the Box Model: the box-sizing
property

content-box

The specified width and height apply to the width and height respectively
of the content box of the element. The padding and border of the
element are laid out and drawn outside the specified width and height.

border-box

Length and percentages values for width and height on this element
determine the border box of the element. That is, any padding or
border specified on the element is laid out and drawn inside this
specified width and height. The content width and height are
calculated by subtracting the border and padding widths of the
respective sides from the specified width and height properties.


Also, an initial setting of a flex container is flex-shrink: 1. This means that flex items can shrink in order to fit within the container.

Therefore, a specified width, height or flex-basis will not hold, unless flex-shrink is disabled.

You can override the default with flex-shrink: 0.

Here’s a more complete explanation: What are the differences between flex-basis and width?


Here’s a simple solution:

You have four boxes. You want three on row 1 and the last on row 2.

This is what you have:

flex: 1 1 33.33%;
margin: 10px;

This breaks down to:

  • flex-grow: 1
  • flex-shrink: 1
  • flex-basis: 33.33%

We know that box-sizing: border-box factors padding and borders into the flex-basis. That’s not a problem. But what about the margins?

Well, since you have flex-grow: 1 on each item, there is no need for flex-basis to be 33.33%.

Since flex-grow will consume any free space on the row, flex-basis only needs to be large enough to enforce a wrap.

Since margins also consume free space, flex-grow will not intrude into the margin space.

So try this instead:

flex: 1 1 26%;
margin: 10px;

* {
  box-sizing: border-box;
}

.horizontal-layout {
  display: flex;
  width: 400px;
}

header > span { 
  flex: 1 0 26%;                    /* ADJUSTED */
  margin: 10px;
}

header#with-border-padding {
  flex-wrap: wrap;
}

header#with-border-padding>span {
  flex: 1 0 26%;                   /* ADJUSTED */
}

header#with-border-padding>.button {
  border: 1px solid black;
  padding-left: 5px;
}

header>.button {
  background-color: grey;
}

header>.app-name {
  background-color: orange;
}
NO flex-wrap: wrap, so it not respects the flex 33% <br/>
<header class="horizontal-layout">
  <span class="button">A</span>
  <span class="app-name">B</span>
  <span class="button">C</span>
  <span class="button">D</span>
</header>
<br/><br/> WITH flex-wrap: wrap : I expect to have 3 boxes in first row and D box in a down<br/>
<header id="with-border-padding" class="horizontal-layout">
  <span class="button">A</span>
  <span class="app-name">B</span>
  <span class="button">C</span>
  <span class="button">D</span>
</header>

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