Consider this Sass:
.comment
width: 320px;
height: 240px;
Any textarea
with the comment
class will be sized 320 by 240 pixels. In WebKit browsers (Chrome, Safari, ...) or Firefox, this is only the initial size -- users can resize textareas to become bigger.
This is helpful to the user, but may be breaking your application layout in some cases.
If you want to disable it, don't introduce any proprietary CSS properties. Instead, set maximum width and/or height to the values of width
and height
:
.comment
width: 320px;
height: 240px;
&.fixed_size
max-width: 320px;
max-height: 240px;
Usually, it's a good compromise to lock a textarea's width but allow users to resize it in length. That way long texts don't need to be edited in a tiny box:
.comment
width: 320px;
height: 240px;
&.fixed_width
max-width: 320px;
Note that you of course don't need to use the same values for maximum width/height. If you choose larger values, users will be able to resize up to those sizes.