display: none vs visibility-hidden
Developers should use display: none when they need to hide elements entirely from the user interface, such as in responsive design to hide non-essential content on mobile devices, or in interactive features like tabs or modals where content is shown conditionally meets developers should use visibility hidden when they need to hide elements without removing them from the document flow, which prevents layout shifts and maintains accessibility features like screen reader compatibility. Here's our take.
display: none
Developers should use display: none when they need to hide elements entirely from the user interface, such as in responsive design to hide non-essential content on mobile devices, or in interactive features like tabs or modals where content is shown conditionally
display: none
Nice PickDevelopers should use display: none when they need to hide elements entirely from the user interface, such as in responsive design to hide non-essential content on mobile devices, or in interactive features like tabs or modals where content is shown conditionally
Pros
- +It is ideal for cases where the hidden element should not affect page layout or be accessible to assistive technologies, unlike alternatives like visibility: hidden which reserves space
- +Related to: css, responsive-design
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
visibility-hidden
Developers should use visibility hidden when they need to hide elements without removing them from the document flow, which prevents layout shifts and maintains accessibility features like screen reader compatibility
Pros
- +It's ideal for scenarios like toggling visibility in animations, hiding form elements for progressive enhancement, or managing UI states where space reservation is critical
- +Related to: css, display-none
Cons
- -Specific tradeoffs depend on your use case
The Verdict
Use display: none if: You want it is ideal for cases where the hidden element should not affect page layout or be accessible to assistive technologies, unlike alternatives like visibility: hidden which reserves space and can live with specific tradeoffs depend on your use case.
Use visibility-hidden if: You prioritize it's ideal for scenarios like toggling visibility in animations, hiding form elements for progressive enhancement, or managing ui states where space reservation is critical over what display: none offers.
Developers should use display: none when they need to hide elements entirely from the user interface, such as in responsive design to hide non-essential content on mobile devices, or in interactive features like tabs or modals where content is shown conditionally
Disagree with our pick? nice@nicepick.dev