--description--
The opposite of flex-shrink
is the flex-grow
property. Recall that flex-shrink
controls the size of the items when the container shrinks. The flex-grow
property controls the size of items when the parent container expands.
Using a similar example from the last challenge, if one item has a flex-grow
value of 1
and the other has a flex-grow
value of 3
, the one with the value of 3
will grow three times as much as the other.
--instructions--
Add the CSS property flex-grow
to both #box-1
and #box-2
. Give #box-1
a value of 1
and #box-2
a value of 2
.
--hints--
The #box-1
element should have the flex-grow
property set to a value of 1
.
assert($('#box-1').css('flex-grow') == '1');
The #box-2
element should have the flex-grow
property set to a value of 2
.
assert($('#box-2').css('flex-grow') == '2');
--seed--
--seed-contents--
<style>
#box-container {
display: flex;
height: 500px;
}
#box-1 {
background-color: dodgerblue;
height: 200px;
}
#box-2 {
background-color: orangered;
height: 200px;
}
</style>
<div id="box-container">
<div id="box-1"></div>
<div id="box-2"></div>
</div>
--solutions--
<style>
#box-container {
display: flex;
height: 500px;
}
#box-1 {
background-color: dodgerblue;
height: 200px;
flex-grow: 1;
}
#box-2 {
background-color: orangered;
height: 200px;
flex-grow: 2;
}
</style>
<div id="box-container">
<div id="box-1"></div>
<div id="box-2"></div>
</div>