 Hey, everyone, Sam here. In this web series, we'll solve common web problems with standards. These techniques are part of the web platform and work with any framework or library. All right, let's go. You're working on your site, and it looks great on mobile and desktop, but one of your pages doesn't actually have enough content to feel all the way to the bottom. So your site just kind of ends, which is not very good. We can fix this by manipulating the body element. So body and HTML work together to frame your whole page. Your body tag just contains your content, but HTML actually extends forever. If you set the min height of your body tag to be 100 view height, which is the size of your user's browser viewport, it'll always fit. You'll also need to set position relative, so you can place absolutely positioned elements, like a footer, at the bottom of the page. Finally, you might also want to clear the margin of your body if you haven't already, since the default margin will make your page just a bit too big, and your users will have scroll bars when they don't need them. One more thing to remember. The HTML element is what you see when you scroll or drag over the ends of your page. So this is your opportunity to give it a nice background color, such that when they go over that edge, they get a nice color that matches well with your site. Remember to use min height of 100 view height on your body tag, and remember to set an awesome color on your HTML element for users who over scroll your page. This was fitting to page the standard way. See you on the next tip. Yeah, sure. You got me laughing now, so I'm all happy.