align-content
Note that align-content: stretch
is also in play here.
The align-content
property distributes free space among flex lines. It's default value is stretch
.
So when your items wrap to two lines, align-content: stretch
distributes free space equally across lines.
align-items
Remove align-items: center
from the container. You'll then notice that when items wrap, there is no gap between lines (or "rows", in this case). demo
Line heights are set by align-content
, the height of the items, and the content of the items.
align-content
and align-items
working together
Restore align-items: center
. Now when items wrap, there is a visible gap between lines.
This is because align-items: center
positions the items in the vertical center of the line, based on line heights established by align-content: stretch
, item heights, and item content.
The line heights are set here (with align-content: stretch
and align-items: stretch
):
... and continue here (with align-content: stretch
and align-items: center
):
align-items
is having no effect on the height of the flex line. That job is andled by align-content
.
However, by changing the value of align-content
(to flex-start
, flex-end
, space-between
, center
, etc.), you pack the flex lines, squeezing out the free space, and hence removing the gaps.
Why is the first row taller than the second row with align-content: stretch
?
The container is set to height: 800px
.
There are two items with defined heights:
.item-3 { height: 250px }
.item-4 { height: 300px }
When .item-5
and .item-6
form the second row, the free space in the container is, in its simplest form, 500px (800px - 300px).
So, in a container with two rows and align-content: stretch
, 250px is distributed to the height of each row.
- first row is 300px (defined height) plus 250px (free space)
- second row is 250px (free space)
That's why the first row is taller.
Just note that the free space calculation above is slightly off in the actual layout. That's because there is text in the items, which consumes free space. You can factor in the height of the text to get the precise figures, or remove the text altogether to see the calculations above fall into place.
More details: