Using multiple column layouts isn't generally recommended on a mobile device because of the narrow screen width, but there are times where you may need to place small elements side-by-side (like buttons or navigation tabs, for example).
The jQuery Mobile framework provides a simple way to build CSS-based columns through a block style class convention called
ui-grid
.There are two preset configurations layouts — two-column (using the
class
of ui-grid-a
), and three-column (using the class
of ui-grid-b
) — that can be used in any situation that requires columns. Grids are 100% width, completely invisible (no borders or backgrounds) and don't have padding or margins, so they shouldn't interfere with the styles of elements placed inside them.Two column grids
To build a two-column (50/50%) layout, start with a container with aclass
of ui-grid-a
, and add two child containers inside it classed with ui-block-a
for the first column and ui-block-b
for the second:
<div class="ui-grid-a">
<div class="ui-block-a"><strong>I'm Block A</strong> and text inside will wrap</div>
<div class="ui-block-b"><strong>I'm Block B</strong> and text inside will wrap</div>
</div><!-- /grid-a -->
The above markup produces the following content layout:As you see above, by default grid blocks have no visual styling; they simply present content side-by-side.
Grid classes can be applied to any container. In this next example, we add
ui-grid-a
to a fieldset
, and apply the ui-block
classes to the two buttons inside to stretch them each to 50% of the screen width:
<fieldset class="ui-grid-a">
<div class="ui-block-a"><button type="submit" data-theme="c">Cancel</button></div>
<div class="ui-block-b"><button type="submit" data-theme="b">Submit</button></div>
</fieldset>
Theme classes (not data-theme attributes) from the theming system can be added to an element, including grids. On the blocks below, we're adding two classes: ui-bar
to add the default bar padding and ui-bar-e
to apply the background gradient and font styling for the "e" toolbar theme swatch. For illustration purposes, an inline style="height:120px"
attribute is also added to each grid to set each to a standard height.Three-column grids
The other grid layout configuration usesclass=ui-grid-b
on the parent, and 3 child container elements, each with its respective ui-block-a/b/c
class, to create a three-column layout (33/33/33%). Note: These blocks are also styled with theme classes so the grid layout is clearly visible.
<div class="ui-grid-b">
<div class="ui-block-a">Block A</div>
<div class="ui-block-b">Block B</div>
<div class="ui-block-c">Block C</div>
</div><!-- /grid-a -->
This will produce a 33/33/33% grid for our content.And an example of a 3 column grid with buttons inside:
Four-column grids
A four-column, 25/25/25/25% grid is created by specifyingclass=ui-grid-c
on the parent and adding a fourth block. Note: These blocks are also styled with theme classes so the grid layout is clearly visible.Five-column grids
A five-column, 20/20/20/20/20% grid is created by specifyingclass=ui-grid-d
on the parent and adding a fourth block. Note: These blocks are also styled with theme classes so the grid layout is clearly visible.Multiple row grids
Grids are designed to wrap to multiple rows of items. For example, if you specify a 3-column grid (ui-grid-b) on a container that has nine child blocks, it will wrap to 3 rows of 3 items each. There is a CSS rule to clear the floats and start a new line when theclass=ui-block-a
is seen so make sure to assign block classes in a repeating sequence (a, b, c, a, b, c, etc.) that maps to the grid type:
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