Position

The CSS property determining how an element is placed in the document flow—static, relative, absolute, fixed, or sticky. Understanding positioning is essential for creating overlays, sticky elements, and complex layouts. Framer provides visual controls for common positioning patterns.

Related terms

Related terms

Absolute Positioning

A CSS layout method that removes an element from the normal document flow and positions it relative to its nearest positioned ancestor. This technique is useful for overlays, badges, and decorative elements that need precise placement regardless of surrounding content. Use sparingly, as absolutely positioned elements don't affect the layout of other elements and can cause overlap issues on different screen sizes.

Constraint

Rules that define how an element should resize or reposition when its parent container changes size. Constraints control whether elements stretch, stay fixed, or maintain proportional relationships during responsive resizing. Setting constraints correctly in Framer ensures your layouts adapt elegantly across different screen sizes.

Container

A parent element that holds and organizes child elements, defining boundaries for layout and positioning. Containers with maximum widths prevent content from becoming too wide on large screens while allowing full-width backgrounds. Framer's containers support auto layout, padding, and responsive size controls for flexible layouts.

Fixed Position

A positioning method that anchors elements relative to the browser viewport, keeping them visible during scrolling. Fixed elements are useful for navigation">sticky navigation, floating action buttons, and persistent calls to action. Use fixed positioning sparingly to avoid blocking content and reducing usable space.