Why can't <fieldset> be flex containers?

HtmlCssFlexbox

Html Problem Overview


I tried to style a fieldset element with display: flex and display: inline-flex.

However, it didn't work: flex behaved like block, and inline-flex behaved like inline-block.

This happens both on Firefox and Chrome, but strangely it works on IE.

Is it a bug? I couldn't find that fieldset should have any special behavior, neither in HTML5 nor in CSS Flexible Box Layout specs.

fieldset, div {
    display: flex;
    border: 1px solid;
}

<fieldset>
    <p>foo</p>
    <p>bar</p>
</fieldset>
<div>
    <p>foo</p>
    <p>bar</p>
</div>

Html Solutions


Solution 1 - Html

According to Bug 984869 - display: flex doesn't work for button elements,

> <button> is not implementable (by browsers) in pure CSS, so they are a > bit of a black box, from the perspective of CSS. This means that they > don't necessarily react in the same way that e.g. a <div> would. > > This isn't specific to flexbox -- e.g. we don't render scrollbars if > you put overflow:scroll on a button, and we don't render it as a > table if you put display:table on it. > > Stepping back even further, this isn't specific to <button>. Consider > <fieldset> and <table> which also have special rendering behavior: > > > > data:text/html,

abc
def
> > In these cases, Chrome agrees with us and disregards the flex > display mode. (as revealed by the fact that "abc" and "def" end up > being stacked vertically). The fact that they happen to do what you're > expecting on <button style="display:flex"> is likely just due to an > implementation detail. > > In Gecko's button implementation, we hardcode <button> (and > <fieldset>, and <table>) as having a specific frame class (and hence, > a specific way of laying out the child elements), regardless of the > display property. > > If you want to reliably have the children reliably arranged in a > particular layout mode in a cross-browser fashion, your best bet is to > use a wrapper-div inside the button, just as you would need to inside > of a <table> or a <fieldset>.

Therefore, that bug was marked as "resolved invalid".

There is also Bug 1047590 - display: flex; doesn't work in <fieldset>, currently "unconfirmed".


Good news: Firefox 46+ implements Flexbox for <fieldset>. See bug 1230207.

Solution 2 - Html

I find out this might be a bug on Chrome and Firefox where legend and fieldset are replaced elements.

Bugs Reported:

Bug Chrome (fixed since v86)
Bug Firefox (fixed since v46)

A possible Workaround:

A possible workaround would be using <div role="group"> in HTML, and applying in CSS div[role='group'] as selector.


UPDATE

In Chrome version 83 button can work with the display: inline-grid/grid/inline-flex/flex, you can see the demo below:

button {
  display: inline-flex;
  height: 2rem;
  align-items: flex-end;
  width: 4rem;
  -webkit-appearance: none;
  justify-content: flex-end;
}

<!-- 

The align-items keyword should fail in Chrome 81 or earlier, but work in Chrome 83 or later. To see the error, the button needs styles that make it more of an extrinsic container. In other words, it needs a height or width set. 
 
-->
<button>Hi</button>
<input type="button" value="Hi">

Solution 3 - Html

Please star the Chrome bug to increase bug priority

This is a bug in Chrome. Please add a star to this issue to increase it's priority to be fixed: https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=375693

In the mean time, I created these three Code Pen examples to show how to work around the issue. They are built using CSS Grid for the examples but the same techniques can be used for flexbox.

Using aria-labelledby instead of legend

This is the more propper way to deal with the problem. The downside is that you have to deal with generating unique IDs applied to every fake legend element.

https://codepen.io/daniel-tonon/pen/vaaGzZ

<style>
.flex-container {
    display: flex;
}
</style>

<fieldset aria-labelledby="fake-legend">
    <div class="flex-container">
        <div class="flex-child" id="fake-legend">
            I am as good accessibilty wise as a real legend
        </div>

        ...

    </div>
</fieldset>

Using role="group" and aria-labelledby instead of fieldset and legend

If you need the flex-container to be able to stretch to the height of a sibling element and then also pass that stretch onto its children, you will need to use role="group" instead of <fieldset>

https://codepen.io/daniel-tonon/pen/BayRjGz

<style>
.flex-container {
    display: flex;
}
</style>

<div role="group" class="flex-container" aria-labelledby="fake-legend">
    <div class="flex-child" id="fake-legend">
        I am as good accessibilty wise as a real legend
    </div>

    ...

</div>

Creating a fake duplicate legend for styling purposes

This is a far more hacky way to do it. It is still just as accessible but you don't have to deal with IDs when doing it this way. The main down side is that there is going to be duplicate content between the real legend element and the fake legend element.

https://codepen.io/daniel-tonon/pen/zLLqjY

<style>
.screen-reader-only {
    position: absolute;
    opacity: 0;
    pointer-events: none;
}
.flex-container {
    display: flex;
}
</style>

<fieldset>
    <legend class="screen-reader-only">
        I am a real screen-reader accessible legend element
    </legend>

    <div class="flex-container">
        <div class="flex-child" aria-hidden="true">
            I am a fake legend purely for styling purposes
        </div>

        ...

    </div>
</fieldset>

Legend MUST be a direct decendent

When you are first trying to fix this yourself, you will probably try doing this:

<!-- DO NOT DO THIS! -->
<fieldset>
    <div class="flex-container">
        <legend class="flex-child">
            Broken semantics legend text
        </legend>

        ...

    </div>
</fieldset>

You will discover it works, and then you will probably move on without giving it a second thought.

The problem is that putting a div wrapper between the fieldset and the legend breaks the relationship between the two elements. This breaks the semantics of fieldset/legend.

So by doing this, you have defeated the whole purpose of using fieldset/legend in the first place.

Also, there isn't much point in using a fieldset if you don't give that fieldset a legend.

Solution 4 - Html

In my experience, I've found that neither <fieldset>, nor <button>, nor <textarea> can properly use display:flex or inherited properties.

As others have already mentioned, bugs have been reported. If you want to use flexbox to control ordering (e.g. order:2), then you'd need to wrap the element in a div. If you want flexbox to control actual layout and dimensions, then you may want to consider using a div, instead of the input control (Which stinks, I know).

Solution 5 - Html

<div role="group">
    <p>foo</p>
    <p>bar</p>
</div>
<div>
    <p>foo</p>
    <p>bar</p>
</div>

Might need to use role-group because firefox, chrome and i think safari have a bug with fieldsets apparently. Then the selector in the CSS would simply be

div[role='group'], div {
    display: flex;
    border: 1px solid;
}

Edit: Here are some issues that other people are experiencing as well.

Issue 375693

Issue 262679

Solution 6 - Html

you can put additional div in <fieldset> with the following props:

flex-inner-wrapper {
  display: inherit;
  flex-flow: inherit;
  justify-content: inherit;
  align-items: inherit;
}

Solution 7 - Html

To answer the original question: yes, it is a bug, but it wasn't well-defined at the time the question was asked.

Now the rendering for fieldset is better defined: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/rendering.html#the-fieldset-and-legend-elements

In Firefox and Safari, flexbox on fieldset now works. It doesn't yet in Chromium. (See https://bugs.chromium.org/p/chromium/issues/detail?id=375693 )

Also see https://blog.whatwg.org/the-state-of-fieldset-interoperability for improvements made in the specification in 2018.

Attributions

All content for this solution is sourced from the original question on Stackoverflow.

The content on this page is licensed under the Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-SA 4.0) license.

Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionOriolView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - HtmlOriolView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - HtmldippasView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - HtmlDaniel TononView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - HtmlpaceauxView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - HtmlSharpCodeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - HtmlJemyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - HtmlzcorpanView Answer on Stackoverflow