A lot of designers are currently struggling to accomplish page layout that was simple to achieve using tables but is frustratingly difficult (if not impossible) with CSS. The following example shows a simple method to display a mutli-column content layout without having to worry about complex floats, margins, and padding.
It all begins with a simple unordered list with a line item and div for each column. We assign an id selector to each item that may have individual CSS styles applied to it (eg id="column1"). Then add a style sheet class for all items that share formatting (eg: class="r_column").
<ul> <li> <div class="r_column" id="column1"> <p>First Column</p> </div> </li> <li> <div class="r_column" id="column2"> <p>Second Column</p> </div> </li> <li> <div class="r_column" id="column3"> <p>Third Column</p> </div> </li> </ul>
The real magic occurs in the CSS where we make the list appear horizontally rather than vertically. Because of differences in browsers we have to set the margin and padding explicitly. The rest is explained in the code below.
ul { clear:both; // needed to clear the floated divs } ul li { padding: 0; // removes spacing between items margin: 0; // removes spacing between items display: inline; // makes the list side by side list-style:none; // removes the bullet from the list } div.r_column { margin: 0 5px; // set the space between items display: block; // needed to correctly render the div float:left; // make divs appear side by side width: 20em; // set the width of the column }
Put it all together and we get:
First Column
Second Column
Third Column
Now isn't that about as simple as you can get?