<style>:root { --width: 100px; } /* Set the variable --width */tabletd{
width: var(--width); /* use it to set the width of TD elements */border: 1px solid;
}
</style><table><tr><tdclass="tab">elementOne</td><tdclass="tab">elementtwo</td></tr></table><!-- reuse the variable to set the width of the DIV element --><divstyle="width: var(--width); border: 1px solid;">Element three</div>
You can also use variables in the calc() function:
For that you will have to use JavaScript (document.getElementById(elementOne).offsetWidth or similar, depending on exactly what width you are looking for). Calc is used to do math, not execute scripts. There is no way of putting JS in a CSS statement, like you are trying to do.
Edit: For some background on why this would be a bad idea to implement in CSS, se Value calculation for CSS (TL;DR: It has been tried. Things exploded)
Solution 3:
Yes. There are 2 possible ways of doing this with CSS (although not with calc):
1) If you know how many columns you have, then just use % (i.e. 50% for 2 cols)
2) If you don't know how many columns you have or you maybe can't use % for whatever use-case you might have, then you can use flexbox.
Depending on your browser compatibility target, you can combine the "old" and "new" syntax to get some awesome results.
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