Copyright © 2011 W3C® (MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved. W3C liability, trademark and document use rules apply.
This CSS3 module defines properties for text manipulation and specifies their processing model. It covers line breaking, justification and alignment, white space handling, text decoration and text transformation.
This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.
Publication as a Working Draft does not imply endorsement by the W3C Membership. This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.
This CSS module has been produced as a combined effort of the W3C Internationalization Activity, and the Style Activity and is maintained by the CSS Working Group. It also includes contributions made by participants in the XSL Working Group (members only).
This document was produced by a group operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.
Feedback on this draft should be posted to the (archived) public mailing list www-style@w3.org (see instructions) with [css3-text] in the subject line. You are strongly encouraged to complain if you see something stupid in this draft. The editors will do their best to respond to all feedback.
If you have implemented properties from the May 2003 CSS3 Text CR please let us know so we can take that into account as we redraft the spec. You can post to www-style (public), post to the CSS WG mailing list (Member-restricted), or email fantasai directly (personal).
The following features are at risk and may be cut from the spec during its CR period if there are no (correct) implementations:
hanging-punctuation
’ property
all
’ value of the ‘hyphens
’ property
letter-spacing
’ and ‘word-spacing
’
hyphenate-limit-*
’ properties
hyphenate-resource
’ property / ‘@hyphenate-resource
’ at-rule
text-outline
’ property
text-trim
’ property
text-autospace
’ property
hyphens
’
property
hyphenate-character
’ property
hyphenate-limit-zone
’ property
hyphenate-limit-word
’ property
hyphenate-limit-lines
’ and ‘hyphenate-limit-last
’ properties
text-decoration-line
’ property
text-decoration-color
’ property
text-decoration-style
’ property
text-decoration
’ property
text-decoration-skip
’ property
text-underline-position
’ property
text-shadow
’ property
text-outline
’
property
[document here]
This draft describes features that are specific to certain scripts. There is an ongoing discussion about where these features belong: in existing CSS properties, in new CSS properties, or perhaps in other specifications.
A grapheme cluster is what a language user considers to be a character or a basic unit of the script. The term is described in detail in the Unicode Technical Report: Text Boundaries [UAX29]. This specification uses the extended grapheme cluster definition in [UAX29] (not the legacy grapheme cluster definition). The UA may further tailor the definition as allowed by Unicode.
Typographic behavior varies somewhat by language, but varies drastically by writing system. For convenience, CSS3 Text defines the following script categories, which combine typographically-similar scripts together.
These definitions are used primarily in describing line-breaking and justification behavior.
Appendix E provides a more comprehensive listing of the various scripts in each category.
Conformance requirements are expressed with a combination of descriptive assertions and RFC 2119 terminology. The key words “MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” in the normative parts of this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119. However, for readability, these words do not appear in all uppercase letters in this specification. All of the text of this specification is normative except sections explicitly marked as non-normative, examples, and notes. [RFC2119]
Examples in this specification are introduced with the words “for
example” or are set apart from the normative text with
class="example"
, like this:
This is an example of an informative example.
Informative notes begin with the word “Note” and are set apart from
the normative text with class="note"
, like this:
Note, this is an informative note.
Conformance to CSS Text Level 3 is defined for three conformance classes:
A style sheet is conformant to CSS Text Level 3 if all of its declarations that use properties defined in this module have values that are valid according to the generic CSS grammar and the individual grammars of each property as given in this module.
A renderer is conformant to CSS Text Level 3 if, in addition to interpreting the style sheet as defined by the appropriate specifications, it supports all the properties defined by CSS Text Level 3 by parsing them correctly and rendering the document accordingly. However, the inability of a UA to correctly render a document due to limitations of the device does not make the UA non-conformant. (For example, a UA is not required to render color on a monochrome monitor.)
An authoring tool is conformant to CSS Text Level 3 if it writes syntactically correct style sheets, according to the generic CSS grammar and the individual grammars of each property in this module.
UAs must treat as invalid any properties or values they do not support. Experimental implementations of a feature should support only a vendor-prefixed syntax for the property/value.
text-transform
’ propertyName: | text-transform |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ [ capitalize | uppercase | lowercase ] || fullwidth || fullsize-kana ] |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property transforms text for styling purposes. Values have the following meanings:
none
capitalize
uppercase
lowercase
fullwidth
fullsize-kana
Authors using this for ruby text may also want to use
‘font-variant: ruby
’. [CSS3FONT]
Although limited, the case mapping process has some language dependencies. Some well known examples are Turkish and Greek. If the content language is known then any such language-specific rules must be used.
The case mapping rules for the character repertoire specified by the Unicode Standard can be found on the Unicode Consortium Web site. [UNICODE] Only characters belonging to bicameral scripts are affected.
The definition of "word" used for ‘capitalize
’ is UA-dependent; [UAX29] is suggested (but not
required) for determining such word boundaries. Authors should not expect
‘capitalize
’ to follow
language-specific titlecasing conventions (such as skipping articles in
English).
The definition of fullwidth and halfwidth forms can be found on the Unicode consortium web site at [UAX11]. The mapping to fullwidth form is defined by <wide> tag of Character Decomposition Mapping in [UAX44].
Should all characters be transformed, or only letters (i.e. not symbols, punctuation, or white space)
Text transformation happens after white
space processing. (This only matters when ‘fullwidth
’ transforms U+0020 space characters to
U+3000.) This requirement may need to be relaxed during
CR, so mark at-risk.
The following example converts the ASCII characters in abbreviations in Japanese to their fullwidth variants so that they lay out and line break like ideographs:
abbr:lang(ja) { text-transform: fullwidth; }
The source text of a document often contains formatting that is not relevant to the final rendering: for example, breaking the source into segments (lines) for ease of editing or adding white space characters such as tabs and spaces to indent the source code. CSS white space processing allows the author to control interpretation of such formatting: to preserve or collapse it away when rendering the document.
In the document source, segments can be delimited by carriage returns (U+000D), linefeeds (U+000A) or a combination (U+000D U+000A), or by some other mechanism, such as the SGML RECORD-START and RECORD-END tokens. If no segmentation rules are specified for the document language, each line feed (U+000A), carriage return (U+000D) and CRLF sequence (U+000D U+000A) in the text is considered a segment break. (This default rule also applies to generated content.) In CSS, each such segment break is treated as a single line feed character (U+000A).
White space processing in CSS interprets white space characters only for rendering: it has no effect on the underlying document data.
Note that the document parser may have not only normalized segment breaks, but also collapsed other space characters or otherwise processed white space according to markup rules. Because CSS processing occurs after the parsing stage, it is not possible to restore these characters for styling. Therefore, some of the behavior specified below can be affected by these limitations and may be user agent dependent.
Control characters (Unicode class Cc) other than tab (U+0009), line feed (U+000A), space (U+0020), and the bidi formatting characters (U+202x) should be rendered as invisible zero-width characters. UAs may instead treat them as visible characters. (Note, however, that this will usually result in them being rendered as missing glyphs.) What's the line-breaking behavior? Effects on joining? Can we just copy the behavior of some zero-width Unicode character?
bikeshedding
’ propertyThis section is still under discussion and may change in future drafts.
Name: | bikeshedding |
---|---|
Value: | collapse | discard | [ [preserve | preserve-breaks] && [ trim-inner || consume-before || consume-after ] |
Initial: | collapse |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
Need a property name
This property declares whether and how white space inside the element is collapsed. Values have the following meanings, which must be interpreted according to the white space processing rules:
collapse
preserve
preserve-breaks
collapse
’, but preserves line feeds as forced line
breaks.
discard
trim-inner
consume-before
consume-after
tab-size
’ propertyName: | tab-size |
---|---|
Value: | <integer> |
Initial: | 8 |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property determines the width of the tab character (U+0009), in space characters (U+0020), when rendered. Negative integers are not allowed.
BradK suggests allowing <length> values. Someone else
suggested spaces be given a unit, e.g. ‘8sp
’. This unit could also be used for ‘letter-spacing
’ and ‘word-spacing
’.
White space processing affects only spaces (U+0020), tabs (U+0009), and (post-normalization) line feeds (U+00A0).
For each inline (including anonymous inlines) within an inline formatting context, white space characters are handled as follows, ignoring bidi formatting characters as if they were not there:
If ‘bikeshedding
’ is set to ‘collapse
’ or ‘preserve-breaks
’, white space characters are
considered collapsible and are processed by
performing the following steps:
bikeshedding
’ is not ‘preserve-breaks
’, line feed characters are
transformed for rendering according to the line feed transformation rules.
consume-before
’ is removed. Such
removed spaces do not indicate a line breaking opportunity in the text.
consume-after
’ are removed. Such removed spaces
do not indicate a line breaking opportunity in the text.
If ‘bikeshedding
’ is set to ‘preserve
’, any sequence of spaces unbroken by an
element boundary is treated as a sequence of non-breaking spaces.
However, a line breaking opportunity exists at the end of the sequence.
If ‘bikeshedding
’ is set to ‘discard
’, the first white space character in
every white space sequence is converted to a zero width non-joiner
(U+200C) and the rest of the sequence is removed.
Then, the entire block is rendered. Inlines are laid out, taking bidi
reordering into account, and wrapping as specified by the ‘text-wrap
’
property.
As each line is laid out,
tab-size
’ property.
text-wrap
’ set to ‘normal
’ or ‘avoid
’ the UA may visually collapse their
character advance widths.
Consider the following markup fragment, taking special note of spaces (with varied backgrounds and borders for emphasis and identification):
<ltr>A <rtl> B </rtl> C</ltr>
where the <ltr>
element represents a left-to-right
embedding and the <rtl>
element represents a
right-to-left embedding. If the ‘bikeshedding
’ property is set to
‘collapse
’, the above processing model
would result in the following:
This would leave two spaces, one after the A in the left-to-right embedding level, and one after the B in the right-to-left embedding level. This is then ordered according to the Unicode bidirectional algorithm, with the end result being:
A BC
Note that there are two spaces between A and B, and none between B and C. This is best avoided by putting spaces outside the element instead of just inside the opening and closing tags and, where practical, by relying on implicit bidirectionality instead of explicit embedding levels.
When line feeds are collapsible, they are either transformed into a space (U+0020) or removed depending on the context before and after the line break.
Note that the white space processing rules have already removed any tabs and spaces after the line feed before these checks take place.
text-autospace
’ property is set to add
extra spaces for the combination of the character before the line feed
and after, then the line break is removed.
Comments on how well this would work in practice would be very much appreciated, particularly from people who work with Thai and similar scripts.
white-space
’ propertyName: | white-space |
---|---|
Value: | normal | pre | nowrap | pre-wrap | pre-line |
Initial: | not defined for shorthand properties |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | see individual properties |
The ‘white-space
’ property is a shorthand for
the ‘bikeshedding
’ and ‘text-wrap
’
properties. Not all combinations are represented. Values have the
following meanings:
normal
bikeshedding
’ to ‘collapse
’ and ‘text-wrap
’ to ‘normal
’
pre
bikeshedding
’ to ‘preserve
’ and ‘text-wrap
’ to ‘none
’
nowrap
bikeshedding
’ to ‘collapse
’ and ‘text-wrap
’ to ‘none
’
pre-wrap
bikeshedding
’ to ‘preserve
’ and ‘text-wrap
’ to ‘normal
’
pre-line
bikeshedding
’ to ‘preserve-breaks
’ and ‘text-wrap
’ to
‘normal
’
The following informative table summarizes the behavior of various
‘white-space
’ values:
New Lines | Spaces and Tabs | Text Wrapping | |
---|---|---|---|
normal | Collapse | Collapse | Wrap |
pre | Preserve | Preserve | No wrap |
nowrap | Collapse | Collapse | No wrap |
pre-wrap | Preserve | Preserve | Wrap |
pre-line | Preserve | Collapse | Wrap |
In most writing systems, in the absence of hyphenation a line break occurs only at word boundaries. Many writing systems use spaces or punctuation to explicitly separate words, and line break opportunities can be identified by these characters. Scripts such as Thai, Lao, and Khmer, however, do not use spaces or punctuation to separate words. Although the zero width space (U+200B) can be used as an explicit word delimiter in these scripts, this practice is not common. As a result, a lexical resource is needed to correctly identify break points in such texts.
In several other writing systems, (including Chinese, Japanese, Yi, and sometimes also Korean) a line break opportunity is based on character boundaries, not word boundaries. In these systems a line can break anywhere except between certain character combinations. Additionally the level of strictness in these restrictions can vary with the typesetting style.
CSS does not fully define where line breaking opportunities occur, however some controls are provided to distinguish common variations.
Further information on line breaking conventions can be found in [JLREQ] and [JIS4051] for Japanese, [ZHMARK] for Chinese, and in [UAX14] for all scripts in Unicode.
Any guidance for appropriate references here would be much appreciated.
Information on line-breaking in the absence of dictionaries: for Thai
Floated and absolutely-positioned elements do not introduce a line breaking opportunity. The line breaking behavior of a replaced element is equivalent to that of a Latin character.
It is not clear whether this section handles Southeast Asian scripts well. Additionally, some guidance should be provided on how to break or not break Southeast Asian in the absence of a dictionary.
line-break
’ propertyName: | line-break |
---|---|
Value: | auto | loose | normal | strict |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies the strictness of line-breaking rules applied within an element: particularly how line-breaking interacts with punctuation. Values have the following meanings:
auto
loose
normal
strict
CSS distinguishes between three levels of strictness in the rules for implicit line breaking. The precise set of rules in effect for each level is up to the UA and should follow language conventions. However, this specification does recommend that:
strict
’ line breaking and allowed in ‘normal
’:
normal
’.
normal
’ and ‘strict
’ line breaking and allowed in ‘loose
’:
loose
’:
Support for this property is optional. It is recommended for UAs that wish to support CJK typography and strongly recommended for UAs in the Japanese market.
word-break
’ propertyName: | word-break |
---|---|
Value: | normal | keep-all | break-all |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies line break opportunities within words. Values have the following meanings:
normal
break-all
keep-all
normal
’. This option is mostly used where the
presence of word separator characters still creates line-breaking
opportunities, as in Korean.
When shaping scripts such as Arabic are allowed to break within words
due to ‘break-all
’, the characters must
still be shaped as if the word were not broken.
Hyphenation allows the controlled splitting of words to improve the layout of paragraphs. CSS3 Text does not define the exact rules for hyphenation, but defines six properties and an at-rule that influence hyphenation.
Whether hyphenation is applied can controlled with the ‘hyphens
’ property.
The following author controls are not required to be supported for the UA to claim conformance to CSS Text Level 3:
hyphenate-limit-zone
’
hyphenate-limit-chars
’
hyphenate-limit-lines
’
hyphenate-resources
’
@hyphenate-resource
’
Nonetheless, UAs are strongly encouraged to optimize their line-breaking implementation to choose good break points and appropriate hyphenation points.
These controls are optional because for a low-end implementation of hyphenation, they are not critical enough; and for a high-end implementation of paragraph breaking (such as in Teχ) they are not considered especially useful.
hyphens
’
propertyName: | hyphens |
Value: | none | manual | auto | all |
---|---|
Initial: | manual |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property controls whether hyphenation is allowed to create more break opportunities within a line of text. Values have the following meanings:
In Unicode, U+00AD is a conditional "soft hyphen" and U+2010 is an explicit hyphen. Unicode Standard Annex #14 describes the role of soft hyphens in Unicode line breaking. [UAX14]
In HTML, ­ represents the soft hyphen character which suggests a line break opportunity.
ex­ample
@hyphenation-resource
’). Conditional hyphenation
characters inside a word, if present, take priority over automatic
resources when determining hyphenation points within the word.
auto
’, are marked. The visual
appearance of the mark is UA-dependent. This value is intended for
debugging. Do we really need this value?
Correct automatic hyphenation requires a hyphenation resource
appropriate to the language of the text being broken. The UA is therefore
only required to automatically hyphenate text for which the author has
declared a language (e.g. via HTML lang
or XML
xml:lang
) and for which it has an appropriate hyphenation
resource.
When shaping scripts such as Arabic are allowed to break within words due to hyphenation, the characters must still be shaped as if the word were not broken.
hyphenate-character
’ propertyName: | hyphenate-character |
---|---|
Value: | auto | <string> |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies strings that are shown between parts of
hyphenated words. The ‘auto
’ value
means that the user agent should find an appropriate value. If a string is
specified, it appears at the end of the line before a hyphenation break.
In Latin scripts, the hyphen character (U+2010) is often used to indicate that a word has been split. Normally, it will not be necessary to set it explicitly. However, this can easily be done:
article { hyphenate-character: "\2010" }
Can we to CLDR for hyphenation character data?
hyphenate-limit-zone
’ propertyName: | hyphenate-limit-zone |
---|---|
Value: | <percentage> | <length> |
Initial: | 0 |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | refers to width of the line box |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
Is ‘hyphenate-limit-zone
’ a good name?
Comments/suggestions?
This property specifies the maximum amount of unfilled space (before justification) that may be left in the line box before hyphenation is triggered to pull part of a word from the next line back up into the current line.
hyphenate-limit-word
’ propertyName: | hyphenate-limit-chars |
---|---|
Value: | auto | <integer>{1,3} |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies the minimum number of characters in a hyphenated word. If the word does not meet the required minimum number of characters in the word / before the hyphen / after the hyphen, then the word must not be hyphenated. Nonspacing combining marks (Unicode class) and intra-word punctuation (Unicode classes P*) do not count towards the minimum.
If three values are specified, the first value is the required minimum
for the total characters in a word, the second value is the minimum for
characters before the hyphenation point, and the third value is the
minimum for characters after the hyphenation point. If the third value is
missing, it is the same as the second. If the second value is missing,
then it is ‘auto
’. The ‘auto
’ value means that the UA chooses a value that
adapts to the current layout.
Unless the UA is able to calculate a better value, it is
suggested that ‘auto
’ means 2 for
before and after, and 5 for the word total.
In the example below, the minimum size of a hyphenated word is left to the UA (which means it may vary depending on the language, the length of the line, or other factors), but the minimum number of characters before and after the hyphenation point is set to 3.
p { hyphenate-limit-chars: auto 3; }
hyphenate-limit-lines
’ and ‘hyphenate-limit-last
’ propertiesName: | hyphenate-limit-lines |
---|---|
Value: | no-limit | <integer> |
Initial: | no-limit |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property indicates the maximum number of successive hyphenated
lines in an element. The ‘no-limit
’
value means that there is no limit.
In some cases, user agents may not be able to honor the specified value.
(See ‘word-wrap
’.) It is not defined whether
hyphenation introduced by such emergency breaking influences nearby
hyphenation points.
Name: | hyphenate-limit-last |
---|---|
Value: | none | always | column | page | spread |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property indicates hyphenation behavior at the end of elements, column, pages and spreads. A spread is a set of two pages that are visible to the reader at the same time. Values are:
none
’
always
’
column
’
page
’
spread
’
p { hyphenate-limit-last: always } div.chapter { hyphenate-limit-last: spread }
A paragraph may be formatted like this when ‘hyphenate-limit-last: none
’ is set:
This is just a simple example to show Antarc- tica.
With ‘hyphenate-limit-last: always
’
one would get:
This is just a simple example to show Antarctica.
@hyphenate-resource
’ ruleISSUE: this ‘@hyphenate-resource
’ at-rule is a proposal
that would replace the ‘hyphenate-resource
’ property.
@hyphenate-resource
’
@hyphenate-resource
’
hyphenate-resource
’
hyphenate-resource
’
Feedback on this issue is requested.
The ‘@hyphenate-resource
’ at-rule
allows the author to specify hyphenation resources that the UA may use to
help it hyphenate text correctly.
The ‘@hyphenate-resource
’ rule consists of the
‘@hyphenate-resource
’ at-keyword followed by a
hyphenation mapping declaration block, which has the same syntax as a
declaration block, except that the properties are language codes and the
property values are comma-separated lists of <url> component values
indicating the location of author-suggested hyphenation resources ordered
from most to least preferred. The keyword value ‘local
’ may be used in place of one of the
<url> values to suggest the use of a local (UA-provided)
hyphenation resource. If the ‘local
’
value is missing, it is assumed to be the first (most-preferred) resource
in the list.
The hyphenation resource list that applies to the text in an element is the one given by the last hyphenation mapping declaration whose language code matches the language of the element. Language code matching must be performed using RFC4647 [RFC4647] explain exactly how.
Since the last matching declaration takes effect, authors should list the most general mapping first, and the most specific last. Note also that declarations are not concatenated, so if multiple dictionaries are needed, they must be listed completely in each declaration.
@hyphenate-resource { /* English */ en: url(en-GB.hy); en-US: url(en-US.hy); en-x-hixie: url(hixie.hy), local, url(en-GB.hy); en-US-x-hixie: url(hixie.hy), local, url(en-US.hy); /* français */ fr: url(fr.hy); }
In the example above, the ‘en-x-hixie
’ rule is used for both ‘en-x-hixie
’ and ‘en-GB-x-hixie
’. It is not used for ‘en-US-x-hixie
’ because the ‘en-US-x-hixie
’ rule is given last. If the order
were reversed, the ‘en-US-x-hixie
’
rule would never be used.
Use a format specifier, like @font-face? What is the format?
UAs are not required to support this at-rule.
hyphenate-resource
’ propertyName: | hyphenate-resource |
---|---|
Value: | none | <uri> [, <uri> ]* |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies a comma-separated list of external resources
that can help the UA determine hyphenation points. If more than one
resource is specified, the UA should consult each resource – in
turn, from the beginning – until it finds one that is able to
determine hyphenation points in a word. The ‘none
’ value indicates that no external
resources are available. In any case, the UA can also use local resources
not listed on this property.
Often, finding the right hyphenate resource is based on knowing the
language of the text. The lang
attribute is recommended for
encoding the language, and the corresponding selector is used in this
example:
:lang(dk) { hyphenate-resource: url("hyph_da_DK.dic"), url("hyph_da_NO.dic") }
UAs are not required to support this property.
Use a format specifier, like @font-face? What is the format?
Text wrapping is controlled by the ‘text-wrap
’ and ‘word-wrap
’
properties:
text-wrap
’ propertyName: | text-wrap |
---|---|
Value: | normal | none | avoid |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies the mode for text wrapping. Possible values:
normal
none
avoid
normal
’.
Regardless of the ‘text-wrap
’ value, lines always break at
forced breaks: for all values, line-breaking behavior defined for the BK,
CR, LF, CM NL, and SG line breaking classes in [UAX14] must be honored.
When ‘text-wrap
’ is set to ‘normal
’ or ‘avoid
’, UAs that allow breaks at punctuation
other than spaces should prioritize breakpoints. For example, if breaks
after slashes have a lower priority than spaces, the sequence "check /etc"
will never break between the ‘/
’ and
the ‘e
’. The UA may use the width
of the containing block, the text's language, and other factors in
assigning priorities. As long as care is taken to avoid such awkward
breaks, allowing breaks at appropriate punctuation other than spaces is
recommended, as it results in more even-looking margins, particularly in
narrow measures.
text-wrap: avoid
’ in presenting a
footerThe priority of breakpoints can be set to reflect the intended grouping of text.
Given the rules
footer { text-wrap: avoid; /* inherits to all descendants */ }
and the following markup:
<footer> <venue>27th Internationalization and Unicode Conference</venue> • <date>April 7, 2005</date> • <place>Berlin, Germany</place> </footer>
In a narrow window the footer could be broken as
27th Internationalization and Unicode Conference • April 7, 2005 • Berlin, Germany
or in a narrower window as
27th Internationalization and Unicode Conference • April 7, 2005 • Berlin, Germany
but not as
27th Internationalization and Unicode Conference • April 7, 2005 • Berlin, Germany
word-wrap
’ propertyName: | word-wrap |
---|---|
Value: | normal | [ break-word || hyphenate ] |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property specifies whether the UA may break within a word to
prevent overflow when an otherwise-unbreakable string is too long to fit
within the line box. It only has an effect when ‘text-wrap
’ is
either ‘normal
’ or ‘avoid
’. Possible values:
normal
word-break:
keep-all
’ may be relaxed to match ‘word-break: normal
’ and the various hyphenation
limit properties may be ignored if there are no otherwise-acceptable
break points in the line.
hyphenate
break-word
hyphenate
’, valid hyphenation takes precedence
over ‘break-word
’ breaking.
This property should have been called ‘emergency-wrap
’, however due to historical
reasons it could not be given a less confusing name.
text-align
’ propertyName: | text-align |
---|---|
Value: | [ start | <string> ]? [ start | end | left | right | center | justify | match-parent ] |
Initial: | start |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value, except for ‘match-parent ’ (see prose)
|
This property describes how inline contents of a block are horizontally aligned if the contents do not completely fill the line box. Values have the following meanings:
start
end
left
left
’ aligns to
the edge of the line box that would be the start edge for left-to-right
text.
right
right
’ aligns to
the edge of the line box that would be the end edge for left-to-right
text.
center
justify
text-justify
’ property.
<string>
match-parent
inherit
’ except that an inherited
‘start
’ or ‘end
’ keyword is calculated against its
parent's ‘direction
’ value and
results in a computed value of either ‘left
’ or ‘right
’.
If two keywords are given in combination, then the first value specifies the alignment of the first line and any line immediately after a forced line break; and the second value specifies the alignment of any remaining lines.
A block of text is a stack of line boxes. In
the case of ‘start
’, ‘end
’, ‘left
’, ‘right
’ and ‘center
’, this property specifies how the
inline-level boxes within each line box align with respect to the start
and end sides of the line box: alignment is not with respect to the viewport or
containing block.
In the case of ‘justify
’, the UA
may stretch or shrink any inline boxes by adjusting their text in addition to shifting
their positions. (See also ‘text-justify
’, ‘letter-spacing
’, and ‘word-spacing
’.) If an element's white
space is set to be collapsible, then the UA is not
required to adjust its text for the purpose of justification and may
instead treat the text as having no expansion opportunities. If the UA
chooses to adjust the text, then it must ensure that tab stops continue to
line up as required by the white space
processing rules.
When multiple cells in a column have an alignment character specified, the alignment character of each such cell in the column is centered along a single column-parallel axis and the rest of the text in the column shifted accordingly. (Note that the strings do not have to be the same for each cell, although they usually are.)
If the alignment character appears more than once in the text, the first instance is used for alignment. If the alignment character does not appear in a cell at all, the string is aligned as if the alignment character had been inserted at the end of its contents.
Character-based alignment occurs before table cell width computation so that auto width computations can leave enough space for alignment. Whether column-spanning cells participate in the alignment prior to or after width computation is undefined. If width constraints on the cell contents prevent full alignment throughout the column, the resulting alignment is undefined.
A keyword value may be specified in conjunction with the <string>
value; if it is not given, it defaults to ‘right
’. This value is used:
center
’, the UA may center the aligned contents
using its extremes, center the alignment axis itself (insofar as
possible), or optically center the aligned contents some other way (such
as by taking a weighted average of the extent of the cells' contents to
either side of the axis).
left
’, the rightmost column for ‘right
’ and ‘center
’, the startmost column for ‘start
’, the endmost column for ‘end
’.
TD { text-align: "." center }will cause the column of dollar figures in the following HTML table:
<TABLE> <COL width="40"> <TR> <TH>Long distance calls <TR> <TD> $1.30 <TR> <TD> $2.50 <TR> <TD> $10.80 <TR> <TD> $111.01 <TR> <TD> $85. <TR> <TD> N/A <TR> <TD> $.05 <TR> <TD> $.06 </TABLE>
to align along the decimal point. The table might be rendered as follows:
+---------------------+ | Long distance calls | +---------------------+ | $11.30 | | $22.50 | | $0.80 | | $200567.01 | | $85. | | N/A | | $.05 | | $.06 | +---------------------+
Right alignment is used by default for character-based alignment because numbering systems are almost all left-to-right even in right-to-left writing systems, and the primary use case of character-based alignment is for numerical alignment.
text-align-last
’ propertyName: | text-align-last |
---|---|
Value: | auto | start | end | left | right | center | justify |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property describes how the last line of a block or a line right
before a forced line break is aligned. If a line is also the first line of
the block or the first line after a forced line break, then ‘text-align-last
’ takes precedence over
‘text-align
’ except when two
keywords are given for ‘text-align
’ (i.e. when ‘text-align
’
assigns an explicit first line alignment).
‘auto
’ is equivalent to the value of
the ‘text-align
’ property except when ‘text-align
’ is
set to ‘justify
’, in which case it is
‘justify
’ when ‘text-justify
’
is ‘distribute
’ and ‘start
’ otherwise. All other values have the same
meanings as in ‘text-align
’.
text-justify
’ propertyName: | text-justify |
---|---|
Value: | auto | none | inter-word | inter-ideograph | inter-cluster | distribute | kashida |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | block containers and, optionally, inline elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property selects the justification method used when a line's
alignment is set to ‘justify
’. (See
‘text-align
’.) The property applies to
block containers, but the UA may (but is not required to) also support it
on inline elements. It takes the following values:
auto
One possible algorithm is to determine the behavior based
on the language of the paragraph: the UA can then choose appropriate
value for the language, like ‘inter-ideograph
’ for CJK, or ‘inter-word
’ for English. Another possibility is
to use a justification method that is a universal compromise for all
scripts, e.g. the ‘inter-cluster
’
method with block scripts raised to first priority.
none
inter-word
inter-ideograph
inter-cluster
distribute
kashida
When justifying text, the user agent takes the remaining space between
the ends of a line's contents and the edges of its line box, and
distributes that space throughout its contents so that the contents
exactly fill the line box. If the ‘letter-spacing
’ and ‘word-spacing
’
property values allow it, the user agent may also distribute negative
space, putting more content on the line than would otherwise fit under
normal spacing conditions. The exact justification algorithm is
UA-dependent; however, CSS provides some general guidelines which should
be followed when any justification method other than ‘auto
’ is specified.
CSS defines expansion opportunities as points where the justification algorithm may alter spacing within the text. These expansion opportunities fall into priority levels as defined by the justification method. Within a line, higher priority expansion opportunities should be expanded or compressed to their limits before lower priority expansion opportunities are adjusted. (Expansion and compression limits are given by the letter-spacing and word-spacing properties.)
How any remaining space is distributed once all expansion opportunities
reach their limits is up to the UA. If the inline contents of a line
cannot be stretched to the full width of the line box, then they must be
aligned as specified by the ‘text-align-last
’ property. (If ‘text-align-last
’ is ‘justify
’, then they must be aligned as for
‘center
’ if ‘text-justify
’
is ‘distribute
’ and as ‘start
’ otherwise.)
The expansion opportunity priorities for values of ‘text-justify
’
are given in the table below. Space must be distributed evenly among all
types of expansion opportunities in a given prioritization group, but may
vary within a line due to changes in the font or letter-spacing and
word-spacing values. Since justification behavior varies by writing
system, expansion opportunities are organized by script categories. The different types of
expansion opportunities are defined as follows:
word-spacing
’.
method: | inter-word | inter-ideograph | distribute | inter-cluster | kashida | auto | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
priority: | 1st | 2nd | 1st | 2nd | 1st | 2nd | 1st | 2nd | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 1st | 2nd |
spaces | • | • | • | • | • | ¿? | |||||||
block | • | • | • | • | • | ¿? | |||||||
clustered | • | • | • | • | • | ¿? | |||||||
cursive | • | • | • | • | • | ¿? | |||||||
discrete | • | • | • | • | • | ¿? | |||||||
connected | |||||||||||||
punctuation | • | • | • | ??? | ??? | • | ¿? | ¿? |
The ‘auto
’ column defined
above is informative.
The UA may enable or break optional ligatures or use other font features such as alternate glyphs to help justify the text under any method. This behavior is not defined by CSS.
3.8 Line Adjustment in [JLREQ] gives an example of a set of
rules for how a text formatter can justify Japanese text. It describes
rules for cases where the ‘text-justify
’ property is ‘inter-ideograph
’. It describes rules for cases
where the ‘text-justify
’ property is ‘inter-ideograph
’ and the ‘text-trim
’
property does not specify ‘no-justify
’.
It produces an effect similar to cases where the computed value of
‘text-trim
’ property does not specify
‘force-end
’ or ‘keep-end
’. If the UA wants to prohibit this
behavior, rule b. of 3.8.3 should be omitted.
Note that the rules described in the document specifically target Japanese. Therefore they may produce non-optimal results when used to justify other languages such as English. To make the rules more applicable to other scripts, the UA could, for instance, omit the rule to compress half-width spaces (rule a. of 3.8.3).
The next two properties refer to the <spacing-limit> value type, which is defined as follows:
<spacing-limit>
normal
text-justify
’ property, the element's
language, and other factors. Normal minimum, maximum, and optimal spacing
between a pair of connected or cursive grapheme
clusters is always zero.
<length> or <percentage>
word-spacing
’ propertyName: | word-spacing |
---|---|
Value: | <spacing-limit> {1,3} |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | refers to width of space (U+0020) glyph |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | ‘normal ’ or computed value
or percentage
|
This property specifies the minimum, maximum, and optimal spacing
between words. If only one value is specified, then it represents the
optimal spacing and the minimum and maximum are both ‘normal
’. If two values are specified, then the
first represents both the optimal spacing and the minimum spacing, and the
second represents the maximum spacing. If three values are specified, they
represent the optimum, minimum, and maximum respectively.
If the value of the optimum or maximum spacing is less than the value of the minimum spacing, then its used value is the minimum spacing. If the optimum spacing is greater than the maximum spacing then its used value is the maximum spacing. (This substitution occurs after inheritance.)
In the absence of justification the optimal spacing must be used. The
text justification process may alter the spacing from its optimum (see the
‘text-justify
’ property, above) but must
not violate the minimum spacing limit and should also avoid exceeding the
maximum.
Spacing is applied to each word-separator character left in the text after the white space processing rules have been applied and should be applied half on each side of the character. This is correct for Ethiopian and doesn't matter for invisible spaces, but is it correct for Tibetan? Most publications seem to add space after the tsek mark during justification. Word-separator characters include the space (U+0020), the no-break space (U+00A0), the Ethiopic word space (U+1361), the Aegean word separators (U+10100,U+10101), the Ugaritic word divider (U+1039F), and the Tibetan tsek (U+0F0B, U+0F0C). Is this list correct? If there are no word-separator characters, or if the word-separating character has a zero advance width (such as the zero width space U+200B) then the user agent must not create an additional spacing between words. General punctuation and fixed-width spaces (such as U+3000 and U+2000 through U+200A) are not considered word-separators.
letter-spacing
’ propertyName: | letter-spacing |
---|---|
Value: | <spacing-limit>{1,3} |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | refers to width of space (U+0020) glyph |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | ‘normal ’ or computed value
or percentage
|
This property specifies the minimum, maximum, and optimal spacing between grapheme clusters. If only one value is specified, then it represents all three values. If two values are specified, then the first represents both the optimal spacing and the minimum spacing, and the second represents the maximum spacing. If three values are specified, they represent the optimum, minimum, and maximum respectively.
If the value of the optimum or maximum spacing is less than the value of the minimum spacing, then its used value is the minimum spacing. If the optimum spacing is greater than the maximum spacing then its used value is the maximum spacing. (This substitution occurs after inheritance.)
In the absence of justification the optimal spacing must be used. The
text justification process may alter the spacing from its optimum (see the
‘text-justify
’ property, above) but must
not violate the minimum spacing limit and should also avoid exceeding the
maximum. Letter-spacing is applied in addition to any word-spacing.
‘normal
’ optimum letter-spacing is
typically zero.
Letter-spacing must not be applied at the beginning or at the end of a line. At element boundaries, the letter spacing is given by and rendered within the innermost element that contains the boundary.
For example, given the markup
<P>a<LS>b<Z>cd</Z><Y>ef</Y></LS>g</P>
and the style sheet
LS { letter-spacing: 1em; } Z { letter-spacing: 0.3em; } Y { letter-spacing: 0.4em; }
the spacing would be
a[0]b[1em]c[0.3em]d[1em]e[0.4em]f[0]g
UAs may apply letter-spacing to cursive scripts. In this case, UAs should extend the space between disjoint graphemes as specified above and extend the visible connection between cursively connected graphemes by the same amount (rather than leaving a gap). The UA may use glyph substitution or other font capabilities to spread out the letters. If the UA cannot expand a cursive script without breaking the cursive connections, it should not apply letter-spacing between grapheme clusters of that script at all.
When the resulting space between two characters is not the same as the default space, user agents should not use optional ligatures.
text-trim
’
propertySyntax is derived as a shorthand of the following theoretical properties (defaults given first): text-trim-start: keep-start | force-start text-trim-end: allow-end | force-end | keep-end | keep-fullstop text-trim-adjacent: force-adjacent | keep-adjacent text-trim-kana: ... text-trim-justify: justify | no-justify Filtering out the default values (and ignoring trim-kana), we get the following shorthand: text-trim: normal | force-start || [ force-end | keep-end | keep-fullstop] || keep-adjacent || no-justify
Name: | text-trim |
---|---|
Value: | normal | force-start || [ keep-end | force-end ] || no-justify |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
This property determines whether or not a fullwidth punctuation character should be trimmed (kerned). Values are defined as follows:
In all cases, the UA must trim (kern) the blank half of fullwidth opening punctuation if its previous adjacent character is a fullwidth opening punctuation, fullwidth middle dot punctuation, fullwidth closing punctuation, or ideographic space (U+3000). It must also trim (kern) the blank half of fullwidth closing punctuation if its next adjacent character is a fullwidth closing punctuation, fullwidth middle dot punctuation, or ideographic space (U+3000).
The following example table lists the punctuation pairs affected by adjancent-pairs trimming. It uses halfwidth equivalents to approximate the trimming effect.
Combination | Sample Pair | Looks Like |
---|---|---|
Opening—Opening | 〔+( | 〔( |
Middle Dot—Opening | ・+( | ・( |
Closing—Opening | 〕+( | 〕( |
Ideographic Space—Opening | +( | ( |
Closing—Closing | )+〕 | )〕 |
Closing—Middle Dot | )+・ | )・ |
Closing—Ideographic Space | )+ | ) |
In the context of this property the following definitions apply:
classes and Unicode code point should be reviewed.
Ps
) that belongs to the CJK Symbols and Punctuation
block (U+3000–U+303F) or is categorized as East Asian Fullwidth
(F) by [UAX11].
Also includes LEFT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (U+2018) and LEFT DOUBLE
QUOTATION MARK (U+201C). When trimmed, the left (for horizontal text) or
top (for vertical text) half is kerned.
Pe
) that belongs to the CJK Symbols and Punctuation
block (U+3000–U+303F) or is categorized as East Asian Fullwidth
(F) by [UAX11].
Also includes RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK (U+2019) and RIGHT DOUBLE
QUOTATION MARK (U+201D). May also include fullwidth colon punctuation
and/or fullwidth dot punctuation (see below). When trimmed, the right
(for horizontal text) or bottom (for vertical text) half is kerned.
Fullwidth opening and closing punctuation must not be trimmed if the glyph is not actually fullwidth. This includes the case where the glyph is not fullwidth as a result of the kerning in the font. A fullwidth glyph is one that has the same advance width as a typical Han character in the same font.
Whether fullwidth colon punctuation and fullwidth dot punctuation should be considered fullwidth closing punctuation or fullwidth middle dot punctuation depends on where in the glyph's box the punctuation is drawn. If the punctuation is centered, then it should be considered middle dot punctuation. If the punctuation is drawn to one side (left in horizontal text, top in vertical text) and the other half is therefore blank then the punctuation should be considered closing punctuation and trimmed accordingly.
The UA must classify fullwidth colon punctuation and fullwidth dot punctuation under either the fullwidth closing punctuation category or the fullwidth middle dot punctuation category as appropriate. The UA may rely on language conventions and the layout orientation (horizontal vs. vertical), and/or font information to determine this categorization. The UA may also add additional characters to any category as appropriate.
The following informative table summarizes language conventions for classifying fullwidth colon and dot punctuation:
colon punctuation | dot punctuation | |
---|---|---|
Simplified Chinese (horizontal) | closing | closing |
Simplified Chinese (vertical) | closing | closing |
Traditional Chinese | middle dot | middle dot |
Korean | middle dot | closing |
Japanese | middle dot | closing |
Note, that for Chinese fonts at least, the author observes that the standard convention is often not followed.
Support for this property is optional. It is strongly recommended for UAs that wish to support CJK typography.
text-autospace
’ propertyName: | text-autospace |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ ideograph-numeric || ideograph-alpha || punctuation ] |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | specified value |
When a run of non-ideographic or numeric characters appears inside of ideographic text, a certain amount of space is often preferred on both sides of the non-ideographic text to separate it from the surrounding ideographic glyphs. This property controls the creation of that space when rendering the text. That added width does not correspond to the insertion of additional space characters, but instead to the width increment of existing glyphs.
(A commonly used algorithm for determining this behavior is specified in [JLREQ].)
This property is additive with the ‘word-spacing
’ and ‘letter-spacing
’ [CSS21] properties. That is, the
amount of spacing contributed by the ‘letter-spacing
’ setting (if any) is added
to the spacing created by ‘text-autospace
’. The same applies
to ‘word-spacing
’.
The space added can be compressed or expanded during the justification
process as specified in the ‘text-justify
’ property.
This property applies only to the same inline element context, and can apply across elements if in the same inline element context.
Values have the following meanings:
none
ideograph-numeric
ideograph-alpha
punctuation
It was requested to add a value for doubling the space after periods.
At element boundaries, the font size of the extra spacing is given by and rendered within the innermost element that contains the boundary.
In the context of this property the following definitions apply:
Reviews and feedbacks to the classes/code points are appreciated.
text-orientation
’ property or the
‘text-combine
’ property.
text-orientation
’ property or the
‘text-combine
’ property.
Support for this property is optional. It is recommended for UAs that wish to support CJK typography.
Edge effects control the indentation of lines with respect to other
lines in the block (‘text-indent
’) and how content is aligned
to the start and end edges of a line (‘hanging-punctuation
’, see also ‘text-trim
’).
Japanese has three common start-edge typesetting schemes, which are distinguished by their handling of opening brackets.
Assuming a UA style sheet of p { margin: 1em 0; }
, CSS can
achieve the Japanese typesetting styles with the following rules:
p { /* Flush alignment */ margin: 0; text-indent: 1em; text-trim: force-start; }
p { /* Fullwidth alignment */ margin: 0; text-indent: 1em; text-trim: normal; }
p { /* Hanging alignment */ margin: 0; text-indent: 1em; text-trim: force-start; hanging-punctuation: first; }
text-indent
’ propertyName: | text-indent |
---|---|
Value: | [ <length> | <percentage> ] && [ hanging || each-line ]? |
Initial: | 0 |
Applies to: | block containers |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | refers to width of containing block |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | the percentage as specified or the absolute length |
This property specifies the indentation applied to lines of inline
content in a block. The indent is treated as a margin applied to the start
edge of the line box. Unless otherwise specified via the ‘each-line
’ and/or
‘hanging
’
keywords, only lines that are the first
formatted line of an element. For example, the first line of an
anonymous block box is only affected if it is the first child of its
parent element.
Values have the following meanings:
each-line
hanging
If ‘text-align
’ is ‘start
’ and ‘text-indent
’
is ‘5em
’ in left-to-right text with no
floats present, then first line of text will start 5em into the block:
Since CSS1 it has been possible to indent the first line of a block element using the 'text-indent' property.
Note that since the ‘text-indent
’ property inherits, when
specified on a block element, it will affect descendant inline-block
elements. For this reason, it is often wise to specify ‘text-indent: 0
’ on elements that are specified
‘display: inline-block
’.
hanging-punctuation
’ propertyName: | hanging-punctuation |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ first || [ force-end | allow-end ] ] |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | inline elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property determines whether a punctuation mark, if one is present, may be placed outside the line box (or in the indent) at the start or at the end of a line of text.
Note that if there is not sufficient padding on the block container, hanging punctuation can trigger overflow.
Values have the following meanings:
first
force-end
allow-end
When a punctuation mark hangs, it is not considered when measuring the line's contents for fit, alignment, or justification. Depending on the line's alignment, this can push the mark outside the line box. At most one punctuation character may hang outside each edge of the line.
A hanging punctuation mark is still enclosed inside its inline box and participates in text justification: its character advance width is just not measured when determining how much content fits on the line, how much the line's contents need to be expanded or compressed for justification, or how to position the content within the line box for text alignment.
Non-zero start and end borders or padding on an inline box are not allowed to hang. This can sometimes prevent a hangable punctuation mark from hanging: for example, a period at the end of an inline box with end padding cannot hang outside the end edge of a line.
Stops and commas allowed to hang include: U+002C COMMA, U+002E FULL STOP, U+060C ARABIC COMMA, U+06D4 ARABIC FULL STOP, U+3001 IDEOGRAPHIC COMMA, U+3002 IDEOGRAPHIC FULL STOP, U+FF0C FULLWIDTH COMMA, U+FF0E FULLWIDTH FULL STOP, U+FE50 SMALL COMMA, U+FE51 SMALL IDEOGRAPHIC COMMA, U+FE52 SMALL FULL STOP, U+FF61 HALFWIDTH IDEOGRAPHIC FULL STOP, U+FF64 HALFWIDTH IDEOGRAPHIC COMMA. The UA may include other characters as appropriate.
Should other characters be included?
The CSS Working Group would appreciate if UAs including other characters would inform the working group of such additions.
Support for this property is optional. It is recommended for UAs that wish to support CJK typography, particularly those in the Japanese market.
The following properties describe line decorations that are added to the content of an element. When specified on or propagated to an inline box, such decoration affects all the boxes generated by that element, and is further propagated to any in-flow block-level boxes that split the inline (see CSS2.1 section 9.2.1.1) When specified on or propagated to a a block container that establishes an inline formatting context, the decorations are propagated to an anonymous inline element that wraps all the in-flow inline-level children of the block container. For all other elements, the decorations are propagated to any in-flow children.
Note that text decorations are not propagated to any out-of-flow descendants, nor to the contents of atomic inline-level descendants such as inline blocks and inline tables.
By default underlines, overlines, and line-throughs are applied only to
text (including white space, letter spacing, and word spacing): margins,
borders, and padding are skipped. Elements containing no text, such as
images, are likewise not decorated. The text-decoration-skip
property can be used to modify this behavior, for example allowing inline
replaced elements to be underlined or requiring that white space be
skipped.
The UA should place the start and end of the line inwards from the content edge of the decorating element so that, e.g. two underlined elements side-by-side do not appear to have a single underline. (This is important in Chinese, where underlining is a form of punctuation.)
In determining the position and thickness of text decoration lines, user agents may consider the font sizes and dominant baselines of descendants, but for a given element's decoration must use the same baseline and thickness throughout each line. The color and line style of decorations must remain the same on all decorations applied by a given element, even if descendant elements have different color or line style values.
The following figure shows the averaging for underline:
In the three fragments of underlined text, the underline is drawn consecutively lower and thicker as the ratio of large text to small text increases.
Relatively positioning a descendant moves all text decorations affecting
it along with the descendant's text; it does not affect calculation of the
decoration's initial position on that line. The ‘visibility
’ property, filters, and other
graphical transformations likewise affect text decorations as part of the
text they're drawn on, even if the decorations were specified on an
ancestor element.
In the following style sheet and document fragment:
blockquote { text-decoration: underline; color: blue; }
em { display: block; }
cite { color: fuchsia; }
<blockquote>
<p>
<span>
Help, help!
<em> I am under a hat! </em>
<cite> —GwieF </cite>
</span>
</p>
</blockquote>
...the underlining for the blockquote element is propagated to an
anonymous inline element that surrounds the span element, causing the
text "Help, help!" to be blue, with the blue underlining from the
anonymous inline underneath it, the color being taken from the blockquote
element. The <em>text</em>
in the em block is
also underlined, as it is in an in-flow block to which the underline is
propagated. The final line of text is fuchsia, but the underline
underneath it is still the blue underline from the anonymous inline
element.
This diagram shows the boxes involved in the example above. The rounded aqua line represents the anonymous inline element wrapping the inline contents of the paragraph element, the rounded blue line represents the span element, and the orange lines represent the blocks.
text-decoration-line
’ propertyName: | text-decoration-line |
---|---|
Value: | none | underline || overline || line-through || [ cancel-underline || cancel-overline || cancel-line-through | cancel-all ] |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no (but see prose) |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
Specifies what line decorations, if any, are added to the element. Values have the following meanings:
The use of "cancel-" instead of "no-" is incompatible with
XSL. It was motivated by the desire to make text-decoration:
underline no-underline
less nonsensical.
text-decoration-color
’ propertyName: | text-decoration-color |
---|---|
Value: | <color> |
Initial: | currentColor |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | the computed color |
This property specifies the color of text decoration (underlines
overlines, and line-throughs) set on the element with text-decoration-line
.
text-decoration-style
’ propertyName: | text-decoration-style |
---|---|
Value: | solid | double | dotted | dashed | wavy |
Initial: | solid |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property specifies the style of the line(s) drawn for text
decoration specified on the element. Values have the same meaning as for
the border-style
properties [CSS3BG]. ‘wavy
’ indicates a wavy line.
text-decoration
’ propertyName: | text-decoration |
---|---|
Value: | <text-decoration-line> || <text-decoration-color> || <text-decoration-style> || blink |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property is a shorthand for setting text-decoration-line
, text-decoration-color
, and
text-decoration-style
in one declaration. Omitted values are set to their initial values. A text-decoration
declaration that
omits both the text-decoration-color
and
text-decoration-style
values is backwards-compatible with CSS Levels 1 and 2.
If the blink
keyword is specified the text blinks
(alternates between visible and invisible). Conforming user agents may
simply not blink the text. Note that not blinking the text is one
technique to satisfy checkpoint
3.3 of WAI-UAAG.
The following example underlines unvisited links with a solid blue underline in CSS1 and CSS2 UAs and a navy dotted underline in CSS3 UAs.
:link {
color: blue;
text-decoration: underline;
text-decoration: navy dotted underline; /* Ignored in CSS1/CSS2 UAs */
}
text-decoration-skip
’ propertyName: | text-decoration-skip |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ objects || spaces || ink ] |
Initial: | objects |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property specifies what parts of the element's content any text decoration affecting the element must skip over. It controls all text decoration lines drawn by the element and also any text decoration lines drawn by its ancestors. Values have the following meanings:
Do we need a value that doesn't skip margins and padding?
Note that this property inherits and that descendant elements can have a different setting.
text-underline-position
’ propertyName: | text-underline-position |
---|---|
Value: | auto | alphabetic | below left | below right |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property sets the position of an underline specified on the same element: it does not affect underlines specified by ancestor elements. Values have the following meanings:
auto
’
:lang(ja)
or
:lang(ko)
) the underline must be drawn on the right side of
the text as described for ‘below
right
’.
It is suggested that the underline position be ‘alphabetic
’ unless it crosses either subscripted
(or otherwise lowered) text, or it affects characters from Asian scripts
such as Han or Tibetan, for which an alphabetic underline is too high:
in such cases, aligning to the em box edge as described for ‘below left
’ is more appropriate.
alphabetic
’
below
left
’
vertical-align
’ values given as lengths,
percentages, ‘top
’, or ‘bottom
’ when making this adjustment. (Note that
images that are not affected by the underline per ‘text-decoration-skip
’ will not affect the
position of the underline.)
below
right
’
below left
’. In vertical typographic
mode, the underline is aligned as for ‘below
left
’, except it is aligned to the right edge of the text.
If this causes the underline to be drawn on the "over" side of the text,
then an overline also switches sides and is drawn on the "under" side.
In some cases (such as in OpenType) the font format can offer
information about the appropriate position of an underline. Typically
this information gives the position of an ‘alphabetic
’ underline; in some cases (especially
in CJK fonts), it gives the position of a ‘below
left
’ underline. (In this case, the font's underline metrics
typically touch the bottom edge of the em box). The UA is encouraged to
use information (such as the underline thickness, or appropriate
alphabetic alignment) from the font wherever appropriate.
East Asian documents traditionally use small symbols next to each glyph to emphasize a run of text. For example:
text-emphasis-style
’ propertyName: | text-emphasis-style |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ [ filled | open ] || [ dot | circle | double-circle | triangle | sesame ] ] | <string> |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | ‘none ’, a pair of keywords
representing the shape and fill, or a string
|
This property applies emphasis marks to the element's text. Values have the following meanings:
none
filled
open
dot
•
’, and the open dot is U+25E6 ‘◦
’.
circle
●
’, and the open circle is
U+25CB ‘○
’.
double-circle
◉
’, and the open double-circle
is U+25CE ‘◎
’.
triangle
▲
’, and the open triangle is U+25B3
‘△
’.
sesame
﹅
’, and the open sesame is U+FE46
‘﹆
’.
<string>
If a shape keyword is specified but neither of ‘filled
’ nor ‘open
’ is specified, ‘filled
’ is assumed. If only ‘filled
’ or ‘open
’ is specified, the shape keyword computes to
‘circle
’ in horizontal writing mode and
‘sesame
’ in vertical writing mode.
The marks should be drawn using the element's font settings with its size scaled down to 50%. However, not all fonts have all these glyphs, and some fonts use inappropriate sizes for emphasis marks in these code points. The UA may opt to use a font known to be good for emphasis marks, or the marks may instead be synthesized by the UA. Marks must remain upright in vertical typographic modes: like CJK characters, they do not rotate to match the writing mode.
One example of good fonts for emphasis marks is Adobe's opensource project, Kenten Generic OpenType Font, which is specially designed for the emphasis marks.
The marks are drawn once for each grapheme cluster. However, emphasis marks are not drawn for a grapheme cluster consisting of:
If emphasis marks are drawn for grapheme clusters for which ruby is drawn in the same position as the emphasis mark, the ruby should be stacked between the emphasis marks and the base text. In this case, the position of the emphasis marks for a given element should be determined as if all grapheme clusters have ruby boxes of the same height as the highest ruby box in the element. If the UA is not capable of drawing ruby and emphasis marks on the same side, the UA may hide ruby and draw only emphasis marks.
A future level of CSS may define controls to specify what to do when emphasis marks and ruby text coincide.
text-emphasis-color
’ propertyName: | text-emphasis-color |
---|---|
Value: | <color> |
Initial: | currentcolor |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property describes the foreground color of the emphasis marks.
text-emphasis
’ propertyName: | text-emphasis |
---|---|
Value: | ‘<text-emphasis-style> ’
|| ‘<text-emphasis-color> ’
|
Initial: | see individual properties |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | see individual properties |
This property is a shorthand for setting text-emphasis-style
and text-emphasis-color
in one
declaration. Omitted values are set to their initial values.
Note that ‘text-emphasis-position
’ is not reset in
this shorthand. This is because typically the shape and color vary, but
the position is consistent for a particular language throughout the
document. Therefore the position should inherit independently.
text-emphasis-position
’ propertyName: | text-emphasis-position |
---|---|
Value: | [ above | below ] && [ right | left ] |
Initial: | above right |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property describes where emphasis marks are drawn at. The values have following meanings:
above
’
below
’
right
’
left
’
Emphasis marks are drawn exactly as if each grapheme cluster was
assigned the mark as its ruby annotation text with the ruby position given
by ‘text-emphasis-position
’ and the ruby
alignment as centered.
The effect of emphasis marks on the line height is the same as for ruby text.
Note, the preferred position of emphasis marks depends on the language.
In Japanese for example, the preferred position is ‘above right
’. In Chinese, on the other hand, the
preferred position is ‘below right
’.
The informative table below summarizes the preferred emphasis mark
positions for Chinese and Japanese:
Language | Preferred mark position | Illustration | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Horizontal | Vertical | |||
Japanese | above | right | ||
Chinese | below | right |
text-shadow
’ propertyName: | text-shadow |
---|---|
Value: | none | [<shadow>, ] * <shadow> |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | a color plus three absolute <length>s |
This property accepts a comma-separated list of shadow effects to be
applied to the text of the element. <shadow> is the same as defined for the
‘box-shadow
’ property except that
the ‘inset
’ keyword is not allowed. The
shadow is applied to all of the element's text as well as any text
decorations it specifies. When a text outline
is specified, the shadow shadows the outlined shape rather than the glyph
shape.
The shadow effects are applied front-to-back: the first shadow is on top. The shadows may thus overlay each other, but they never overlay the text itself. The shadow must be painted at a stack level between the element's border and/or background, if present, and the elements text and text decoration. UAs should avoid painting text shadows over text in adjacent elements belonging to the same stack level and stacking context. (This may mean that the exact stack level of the shadows depends on whether the element has a border or background: the exact stacking behavior of text shadows is thus UA-defined.)
Unlike ‘box-shadow
’, text
shadows are not clipped to the shadowed shape and may show through if the
text is partially-transparent. Like ‘box-shadow
’, text shadows do not influence
layout, and do not trigger scrolling or increase the size of the
scrollable area.
The painting order of shadows defined here is the opposite of that defined in the 1998 CSS2 Recommendation.
The text-shadow
property
applies to both the ::first-line
and
::first-letter
pseudo-elements.
text-outline
’ propertyName: | text-outline |
---|---|
Value: | none | [ <color> <length> <length>? | <length> <length>? <color> ] |
Initial: | none |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | a color plus two absolute <length>s |
This property specifies a text outline where the first length represents
the outline's thickness and the second represents an optional blur radius.
The outline never overlays the text itself. Its shape is the same as that
obtained by applying text shadows in every radial direction, i.e. all text
shadows whose offsets satisfy the equation x2 +
y2 = thickness2
. The blur radius is treated
the same as for ‘text-shadow
’.
The Timed-Text WG had suggestions for some keywords (text-outline: normal|heavy|light;) as well as a <length> thickness. Should these be added? How would they be defined? (Maybe use (thin|medium|thick) as in border-width?)
A color value must be specified before or after the length values of the outline effect. The color value will be used as the color of the outline.
Implementations may ignore the blur radius when text outline is combined with a text shadow.
The spread radius argument added to the ‘text-shadow
’
property makes this property somewhat redundant. Should it be kept?
Major changes include:
large-kana
’ to ‘fullsize-kana
’.
hyphenate-limit-before
’ and ‘hyphenate-limit-after
’ into ‘hyphenate-limit-chars
’ and added a
word-length limit as well.
white-space-collapsing
’ to ‘bikeshedding
’.
tab-size
’ property.
keep-words
’ value of
‘word-break
’.
hyphenate-zone
’
property.
unrestricted
’ value of
‘text-wrap
’.
hyphenate
’ value to
‘word-wrap
’.
text-align-first
’ into
‘text-align
’.
last
’ value of ‘hanging-punctuation
’.
text-decoration-lines
’/‘text-decoration
’.
all
’ value of ‘text-decoration-skip
’.
wave
’ value of ‘text-decoration-style
’ to ‘wavy
’.
text-emphasis-position
’ to allow more
combinations of position values.
text-justify
’ behavior.
The following properties have been marked optional for conformance to
this module: ‘hyphenate-limit-zone
’, ‘hyphenate-limit-chars
’, ‘hyphenate-limit-lines
’, ‘hyphenate-resources
’/‘@hyphenate-resource
’, ‘line-break
’,
‘text-autospace
’, ‘text-trim
’,
‘hanging-punctuation
’
Significant details updated:
text-transform:
capitalize
’.
text-transform:
fullwidth
’, defined interaction with space character.
hanging-punctuation
’.
text-decoration-color
’ is the computed
(not specified) color.
This specification would not have been possible without the help from: Ayman Aldahleh, Bert Bos, Tantek Çelik, Stephen Deach, Martin Dürst, Laurie Anna Edlund, Ben Errez, Yaniv Feinberg, Arye Gittelman, Ian Hickson, Martin Heijdra, Richard Ishida, Koji Ishii, Masayasu Ishikawa, Michael Jochimsen, Eric LeVine, Ambrose Li, Håkon Wium Lie, Chris Lilley, Ken Lunde, Shinyu Murakami, Paul Nelson, Chris Pratley, Marcin Sawicki, Arnold Schrijver, Rahul Sonnad, Michel Suignard, Takao Suzuki, Frank Tang, Chris Thrasher, Etan Wexler, Chris Wilson, Masafumi Yabe and Steve Zilles.
This section is non-normative.
Some features are more important in some typographic traditions than in others. This table summarizes which typographic traditions these features were designed for. Parentheses indicates traditions for which the feature is particularly significant. This table should be considered incomplete and non-exhaustive.
Feature | Typographic Tradition |
---|---|
‘hanging-punctuation ’
| CJK |
‘hyphens ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘hyphenate-character ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘hyphenate-limit-chars ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘hyphenate-limit-last ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘hyphenate-limit-lines ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘hyphenate-limit-zone ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘hyphenate-resource ’/‘@hyphenate-resource ’
| Western, South Asian |
‘line-break ’
| CJK (Japanese) |
‘text-autospace ’
| CJK |
‘text-autospace ’: ‘punctuation ’
| European (French) |
‘text-justify ’: ‘inter-cluster ’
| Southeast Asian |
‘text-justify ’: ‘inter-ideograph ’, ‘distribute ’
| CJK |
‘text-justify ’: ‘inter-word ’
| Western, African, Middle-Eastern, Indic |
‘text-justify ’: ‘kashida ’
| Arabic |
‘text-emphasis-style ’
| CJK |
‘text-emphasis-color ’
| CJK |
‘text-emphasis-position ’
| CJK |
‘text-transform ’: ‘capitalize ’, ‘uppercase ’, ‘lowercase ’
| Western |
‘text-transform ’: ‘fullwidth ’, ‘fullsize-kana ’
| CJK |
‘text-trim ’
| CJK |
‘text-underline-position ’:
‘auto ’
| CJK |
‘word-break ’
| CJK (Korean) |
‘word-spacing ’
| Western, African, Middle-Eastern, Indic |
Additional information / corrections on this table are welcome.
This appendix is informative, and is to help UA developers to implement default stylesheet, but UA developers are free to ignore or change.
/* make list items align together */
li { text-align: match-parent; }
/* disable inheritance of text-emphasis marks to ruby text:
emphasis marks should only apply to base text */
rt { text-emphasis: none; }
:root:lang(zh), [lang|=zh] {
/* default emphasis mark position is 'under' for Chinese */
text-emphasis-position: under;
}
If you find any issues, recommendations to add, or corrections, please send the information to www-style@w3.org with [css3-text] in the subject line.
This appendix is informative (non-normative).
This appendix categorizes some common scripts in Unicode 6.0 according to the categorization given above.
UAs should treat unrecognized scripts as discrete.
This listing should ideally be exhaustive wrt Unicode. Please send suggestions and corrections to the CSS Working Group. (As described above, the grouping is primarily based on justification behavior.)
Property | Values | Initial | Applies to | Inh. | Percentages | Media |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
bikeshedding | collapse | discard | [ [preserve | preserve-breaks] && [ trim-inner || consume-before || consume-after ] | collapse | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
hanging-punctuation | none | [ first || [ force-end | allow-end ] ] | none | inline elements | yes | N/A | visual |
hyphenate-character | auto | <string> | auto | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
hyphenate-limit-chars | auto | <integer>{1,3} | auto | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
hyphenate-limit-last | none | always | column | page | spread | none | block containers | yes | N/A | visual |
hyphenate-limit-lines | no-limit | <integer> | no-limit | block containers | yes | N/A | visual |
hyphenate-limit-zone | <percentage> | <length> | 0 | block containers | yes | refers to width of the line box | visual |
hyphenate-resource | none | <uri> [, <uri> ]* | none | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
hyphens | none | manual | auto | all | manual | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
letter-spacing | <spacing-limit>{1,3} | normal | all elements | yes | refers to width of space (U+0020) glyph | visual |
line-break | auto | loose | normal | strict | auto | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
tab-size | <integer> | 8 | block containers | yes | N/A | visual |
text-align | [ start | <string> ]? [ start | end | left | right | center | justify | match-parent ] | start | block containers | yes | N/A | visual |
text-align-last | auto | start | end | left | right | center | justify | auto | block containers | yes | N/A | visual |
text-autospace | none | [ ideograph-numeric || ideograph-alpha || punctuation ] | none | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-decoration | <text-decoration-line> || <text-decoration-color> || <text-decoration-style> || blink | none | all elements | no | N/A | visual |
text-decoration-color | <color> | currentColor | all elements | no | N/A | visual |
text-decoration-line | none | underline || overline || line-through || [ cancel-underline || cancel-overline || cancel-line-through | cancel-all ] | none | all elements | no (but see prose) | N/A | visual |
text-decoration-skip | none | [ objects || spaces || ink ] | objects | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-decoration-style | solid | double | dotted | dashed | wavy | solid | all elements | no | N/A | visual |
text-emphasis | ‘<text-emphasis-style>’ || ‘<text-emphasis-color>’ | see individual properties | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-emphasis-color | <color> | currentcolor | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-emphasis-position | [ above | below ] && [ right | left ] | above right | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-emphasis-style | none | [ [ filled | open ] || [ dot | circle | double-circle | triangle | sesame ] ] | <string> | none | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-indent | [ <length> | <percentage> ] && [ hanging || each-line ]? | 0 | block containers | yes | refers to width of containing block | visual |
text-justify | auto | none | inter-word | inter-ideograph | inter-cluster | distribute | kashida | auto | block containers and, optionally, inline elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-outline | none | [ <color> <length> <length>? | <length> <length>? <color> ] | none | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-shadow | none | [<shadow>, ] * <shadow> | none | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-transform | none | [ [ capitalize | uppercase | lowercase ] || fullwidth || fullsize-kana ] | none | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-trim | normal | force-start || [ keep-end | force-end ] || no-justify | normal | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-underline-position | auto | alphabetic | below left | below right | auto | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
text-wrap | normal | none | avoid | normal | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
white-space | normal | pre | nowrap | pre-wrap | pre-line | not defined for shorthand properties | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
word-break | normal | keep-all | break-all | normal | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
word-spacing | <spacing-limit> {1,3} | normal | all elements | yes | refers to width of space (U+0020) glyph | visual |
word-wrap | normal | [ break-word || hyphenate ] | normal | all elements | yes | N/A | visual |
alphabetic
’, 11.1.6.
always
’, 6.5.
auto
’, 11.1.6.
below left
’, 11.1.6.
below right
’, 11.1.6.
column
’, 6.5.
each-line
, 10.1.
hanging
, 10.1.
none
’, 6.5.
page
’, 6.5.
spread
’, 6.5.