Internet Explorer 6.0 for Windows, and Internet Explorer 5.0 for Mac has a bug that provides a horizontal scrollbar to pages residing in frames or popup windows, even when no horizontal scrollbar is needed. The cause is a flawed interpretation of the XHTML 1.0 transitional doctype.
Here are some solutions to the problem.
To fix the problem, you may select the solution that fits you best.
Solution 1:
Paste the following code in your stylesheet:
html {
overflow-y: scroll;
}
This forces the vertical scroller to be enabled by default, thus, for some reason, eliminating IE’s need for a horisontal one.
Pros:
- Fixes the problem completely, allowing you to keep your XHTML doctype intact
Cons:
- Forces the vertical scroller, even when it’s not needed. Be careful not to attach the stylesheet to, for instance, a frameset index.
Solution 2:
Paste the following code in your stylesheet:
html {
overflow-x: hidden;
overflow-y: auto;
}
This hides the horisontal scrollbar, and sets the vertical scrollbar to only be enabled when necessary.
Pros:
- Visually fixes the problem
- Doesn’t force a vertical scroller when it is not needed
Cons:
- Simply hides the horisontal scroller, doesn’t actually fix the problem. Thus, you may have content that will actually be located outside the page, where normally a horisontal scroller would be needed. It will be forcefully hidden.
Solution 3:
Paste the following code in your stylesheet:
body {
margin-right: -15px;
margin-bottom: -15px;
}
This adds a negative vertical and horisontal margin, the exact amount that IE adds, thus eliminating the artificial need for a scrollbar.
Pros:
- Visually fixes the problem
- Doesn’t force a vertical scrollbar
Cons:
- Doesn’t allow you to utilize the fill horisontal screen real estate, due to the “artificially created” 15px margin
I personally use, and would recommend, solution 1.
Forcing scrollbars
The techniques used to “fix” the bug in question, can also be used for other purposes. With CSS, you can forcefully show or hide both vertical and horisontal scrollbars in both Mozilla Firefox and Internet Explorer.
Forcefully enabling scrollbars:
html {
overflow: scroll;
}
Forcefully disabling scrollbars:
html {
overflow: hidden;
}
Hiding the horizontal scrollbar in IE:
html {
overflow-x: hidden;
}
Hiding the vertical scrollbar in IE:
html {
overflow-y: hidden;
}
Forcing the horizontal scrollbar in IE:
html {
overflow-x: scroll;
}
Forcing the vertical scrollbar in IE:
html {
overflow-y: scroll;<
}
Forcing the horizontal scrollbar in Mozilla:
html {
overflow:-moz-scrollbars-horizontal;
}
Note: This forces the horisontal scrollbar ONLY. This means even if a vertical scrollbar is necessary, it won’t appear.
Forcing the vertical scrollbar in Mozilla:
html {
overflow:-moz-scrollbars-vertical;
}
Note: This forces the vertical scrollbar ONLY. This means even if a horisontal scrollbar is necessary, it won’t appear.
References
Thanks to Nikolaas De Geyndt’s excellent document, for providing some of the solutions.
Great advise, just when i needed it.
Tkx Guys.
Kavi.
Robert Accardi said:
This idea works pretty well, but just keep in mind if not all the pages have the vertical bar then there will be a margin-right applied to these as well.
Just make sure you are ok with this before you proceed.
Thanx allot!
*html {
overflow-x:
hidden;
overflow-y: auto;
}
worked for me
[...] I found the answer in a journal post on No Scope which presented several solutions, I went with the one that forced vertical scroll bars which for some reason makes IE act normal. The only problem was that this forced a vertical scroll bar in even when it wasn’t needed. I could settle with having it forced upon IE users but I didn’t want Firefox users to suffer so I then went in search of the easiest solution to include extra CSS information for IE preferably without using server side. [...]
Nice little explanation from Adobe:
http://www.adobe.com/devnet/dreamweaver/articles/horizontal_scroll.html
–> Remove all depriciated tags. Does that really work though???
Well that is cool it has helped me on this site i am working on , i dint have a problem IE t was with fire fox, but selecting yes to scroll in frames and then using the stlye…
html {
overflow-y: scroll;
}
Works but it does not validate can any one explain why?
Solution 2b:
html {
overflow-y: scroll;
overflow-x: hidden;
}
[...] If you are facing the same problem you can go to this site for a number of solutions. it works! [...]
The better solution is to set the width of the body to less than that of the iframes width+margins/paddings/borders/vertical scrollbar
ie. if you have an iframe that is 800px wide, set the following style for the document it will contain:
body {
border:none;
padding: 0px;
margin: 0px;
width: 784px;
}
the 16px reduction is the width of the vertical scrollbar.
if you raise the margin/padding/border reduce the width accordingly.
Solution 1 is indeed the least worst. However, you’re actually better off not writing xhtml at all – simply html 4 strict. It really doesn’t have any practical downsides.
Thanks a lot dude. I have spent a lot of time figuring out dead vertical scrollbar problem which is appearing only in mozilla. Then come ur solution for the aid and simply putting overflow-y: auto; did a magic. Thanks a lot.
Another solution for solving the problem is to remove the Doctype definition from the top of your page.
DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC “-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN” “http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd”
Dreamweaver automatical includes this with all pages created. And this is what causes the problem in IE.
Dear All,
I have a problem with the scrollbars. In some PCs, the vertical scrollbar does not appear even when required. In others, it appears & works fine. The PCs have the same OS (Windows XP) & the same IE 6.0. The application is run on a full-screen mode. It is a JSP file.
Kirit
Thanks, its gr8
Allah razı olsun be kardeşim.
thanks
[...] bawah situs utama nyekrol. Lama saya utak-atik property Frameset, dan tak berhasil. Alhamdulillah, sebuah blog memberitahu bahwa ini adalah bug IE. Dan cara mengatasinya adalah dengan menambahkan CSS pada situs [...]
The only reliable AND also CSS and HTML-comformat manner to fix this issue is removing the DTD URL from the tag.
Read more about that in here: http://www.adobe.com/devnet/dreamweaver/articles/horizontal_scroll.html
That way, Microsoft IE doesn’t ruin your pages and W3C continues validating them.
I am having a problem forcing the scrollbars in IE.
I tried everything you suggested in both the style sheet and the regular page. I’m new to css and am kicking myself for not just doing this in HTML.
Now I’ve built the whole site and have no scrollbars!
Your fixes fixed it in Firefox but IE still wont’ budge. (See the “upcoming events” link for the fixed one). Even in Firefox the scrollbar is cut off some…
Help!
[...] Style sheets are a very powerful feature of HTML. At the same time the variety of all properties sometimes specific to particular browsers brings a lot of confusion. I’m glad I found a detailed explanation on how to avoid horizontal scrolling of a page. I especially appreciate the pros and cons mentioned for each solution. Here is the link [...]
[...] Adapted From: http://www.noscope.com/journal/2004/02/ie-horizontal-scrollbar-bug [...]
[...] ???”Unnecessary Horizontal Scrollbar in IE Popups or Frames XHTML Bug”???, ????Noscope, ?Wink@Lynn Studio??, [...]
Actually, I got the solution. Except mine is for horizontal scrolling. Could be turned around though.
http://blog.josh420.com/archives/2007/11/fixing-the-ie-overflow-vertical-scrollbar-bug.aspx
Best regards…
I love you and I want your babies!
No seriously, that’s exactly what I needed and searched for for ages.
Be blessed with sparkling, precious things!!!
I very much appreciate you posting this! Simple problems should always have simple solutions, unfortunately, they don’t
.
Much thanks,
Alex
[...] http://www.noscope.com/journal/2004/02/ie-horizontal-scrollbar-bug [...]
[...] http://www.noscope.com/journal/2004/02/ie-horizontal-scrollbar-bug [...]
Even though this post is so old, it’s still extremely valid. Thanks for posting this many years ago, as you just helped me fix an annoying ‘feature’ of IE6 (I used your overflow-x: hidden; to turn the damn thing off, as that is perfect when working in css divs where you can totally control the width of content boxes).
Cheers!
This one is bizarre beyond all others I’ve encountered. Thanks for your help, even if its a hack, I’m getting the feeling hacks are the only way around this one.
I have a problem with scroll bar in mozilla.The horizontal scroll bar gets enabled but the information is truncated which makes the columns overlap and gives a bad look.
This is really very very helpful, thanks a ton for posting it.
Ran into similar problems with Blogger Templates.
Most of the time I can resolve it by just setting the margin and padding in the html element in css. The overflow only as a last resort after I’ve exhausted all other options. Thanks for providing all the options
The bottom of my latest entry has information on removing horizontal scroll bars from Blogger Templates.
Thanks for providing all the different variations for controlling scrollbars in css.
By the way.. You do realize this page has a needless horizontal scrollbar because of your search box right?
Heheh, yes, I do realize that. And because this is my personal website, and because the search box is where I want it, I get to do it.
thank you for this. fixes my problem
[...] that can be fixed by a simple overflow-x: hidden attribute in the CSS. Thanks to noscope’s article – where this bug is explained in detail, along with other XHTML scrollbar bugs in pop ups, frames [...]
Ärgernis #IE7. Der DOCTYPE sorgt für horizontale Scrollbar, obwohl nicht nötig. Die Lösungen tun allesamt weh. http://tinyurl.com/yl22dhc
You are the man!
Thanks a lot!