Hello @TylerH, can you tell that: is it ok to have -ve left/right both margin on element. I used it first time to the tag as there was lot of space left between words. And it solved my issue, that's why asking.
The code was like this: <p>Hello this is a <i>New world</i> out there.</p>
While i element is white-space: no-wrap. I wouldn't use negative margin and instead remove space before and after i element but due to this p don't break at right positions even with word-break: break-word.
ohh... : -ve --> means--> Negative. Sorry about that
Yes @TylerH, we give margins but is it ok to give negative margins. When the element is used between a paragraph or other element.(ok in the sense that it don't have side effects)
A common trick for vertical positioning elements is to use the following CSS:
.item {
position:absolute;
top:50%;
margin-top:-8px; /* half of height */
height: 16px;
}
When seen in the metric view as in Chrome this is what you see:
However, there is no visual margin depicted...
@TylerH yeah true, I also had some ideas around particular cases but he seems not interested by that. He want a generic solution which I think it's impossible