You can apply the overflow CSS property to the problematic div : problematic-div { overflow: hidden; } This defines what happens to content that overflows the content area of an element. For the value scroll, user agents are supposed to provide a scrolling mechanism whether or not it is actually needed; thus, for example, scrollbars would appear even if all content can fit within the element box You can try some examples here Hope it helps.
You can apply the overflow CSS property to the problematic div: #problematic-div { overflow: hidden; } This defines what happens to content that overflows the content area of an element. For the value scroll, user agents are supposed to provide a scrolling mechanism whether or not it is actually needed; thus, for example, scrollbars would appear even if all content can fit within the element box. You can try some examples here.
Hope it helps.
This doesn't really help, as it doesn't show the scroll bars for that div, just hides the overflow. – Yaron Aug 29 at 8:59 @Yaron: Just for clarification, what you want is to show the scroll bars when the inner elements are greater than the parent div width and hide it otherwise? – diosney Aug 29 at 14:48.
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