1. Introduction
CSS Levels 1 and 2 allowed for the alignment of text via text-align and the alignment of blocks by balancing auto margins. However, except in table cells, vertical alignment was not possible. As CSS adds further capabilities, the ability to align boxes in various dimensions becomes more critical. This module attempts to create a cohesive and common box alignment model to share among all of CSS.
Note: The alignment of text and inline-level content is defined in [CSS-TEXT-3] and [CSS-INLINE-3].
Note: This specification is not intended to change any of the behavior defined in CSS2.1 when the properties defined here are set to their initial values. If implementors or anyone else notices a discrepancy, please report this to the CSSWG as an error.
This section (above) is not normative.
1.1. Module interactions
This module adds some new alignment capabilities to the block layout model described in [CSS2] chapters 9 and 10 and defines the interaction of these properties with the alignment of table cell content using vertical-align, as defined in [CSS2] chapter 17.
The interaction of these properties with Grid Layout [CSS-GRID-1] and Flexible Box Layout [CSS-FLEXBOX-1] is defined in their respective modules. The property definitions here supersede those in [CSS-FLEXBOX-1] (which have a smaller, earlier subset of permissible values).
No properties in this module apply to the ::first-line
or ::first-letter
pseudo-elements.
1.2. Values
This specification follows the CSS property definition conventions from [CSS2]. Value types not defined in this specification are defined in CSS Values & Units [CSS-VALUES-3]. Other CSS modules may expand the definitions of these value types.
In addition to the property-specific values listed in their definitions, all properties defined in this specification also accept the CSS-wide keywords keywords as their property value. For readability they have not been repeated explicitly.
1.3. Partial Implementations
Since it is expected that support for the features in this module will be deployed in stages corresponding to the various layout models affected, it is hereby clarified that the rules for partial implementations that require treating as invalid any unsupported feature apply to any alignment keyword which is not supported across all layout modules to which it applies for layout models in which the implementation supports the property in general.
For example, if an implementation supports align-self in [CSS-GRID-1] and [CSS-FLEXBOX-1], then it must treat start as invalid unless it is supported in both grid and flex containers. However if that same implementation does not support align-self for block-level elements at all, then a lack of implementation of align-self: start does not trigger this requirement to treat it as invalid.
2. Overview of Alignment Properties
The box alignment properties in CSS are a set of 6 properties that control alignment of boxes within other boxes. They can be described along two axises:
- which dimension they apply to (main/inline vs. cross/block), and
- whether they control the position of the box within its parent, or the box’s content within itself.
Note: This specification uses the terms “justify” and “align” to distinguish between alignment in the main/inline and cross/block dimensions, respectively. The choice is somewhat arbitrary, but having the two terms allows for a consistent naming scheme that works across all of CSS’s layout models (including CSS Flexbox 1 §2 Flex Layout Box Model and Terminology)
The following table summarizes the box alignment properties and the display types they can apply to.
Common | Axis | Aligns | Applies to |
---|---|---|---|
justify-content | main/inline | content within element (effectively adjusts padding) | block containers, flex containers, and grid containers |
align-content | cross/block | ||
justify-self | inline | element within parent (effectively adjusts margins) | block-level boxes, absolutely-positioned boxes, and grid items |
align-self | cross/block | absolutely-positioned boxes, flex items, and grid items | |
justify-items | inline | items inside box (controls child items’ justify-self: auto) | block containers and grid containers |
align-items | cross/block | flex containers and grid containers |
Note: The *-items properties don’t affect the element itself. When set on a container, they specify the interpretation of any *-self: auto used on children of the container element.
3. Alignment Terminology
Since this module defines alignment properties for all layout modes in CSS, some abstract terminology is introduced:
- alignment subject
- The alignment subject is the thing or things being aligned by the property. For justify-self and align-self, the alignment subject is the margin box of the box the property is set on, and assumes the writing mode of that box. For justify-content and align-content, the alignment subject is defined by the layout mode and refers to some aspect of its contents; it also assumes the writing mode of the box the property is set on.
- alignment container
- The alignment container is the rectangle that the alignment subject is aligned within. This is defined by the layout mode, but is usually the alignment subject’s containing block, and assumes the writing mode of the box establishing the containing block.
- fallback alignment
- Some alignments can only be fulfilled in certain situations or are limited in how much space they can consume; for example, space-between can only operate when there is more than one alignment subject, and baseline alignment, once fulfilled, might not be enough to absorb all the excess space. In these cases a fallback alignment takes effect (as defined below) to fully consume the excess space.
4. Alignment Keywords
All of the alignment properties use a common set of keyword values, which are defined in this section. Keywords fall into three categories:
- positional alignment
- These keywords define alignment as an absolute position within the alignment container.
- baseline alignment
- These keywords define alignment as a relationship among the baselines of multiple alignment subjects within an alignment context.
- distributed alignment
- These keywords define alignment as a distribution of space among alignment subjects.
4.1. Positional Alignment: the center, start, end, self-start, self-end, flex-start, flex-end, left, and right keywords
The positional alignment keywords specify a position for an alignment subject with respect to its alignment container.
Values have the following meanings:
- center (self, content)
- Centers the alignment subject within its alignment container.
- start (self, content)
- Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with the alignment container’s start edge in the appropriate axis.
- end (self, content)
- Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with the alignment container’s end edge in the appropriate axis.
- self-start (self)
- Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with the edge of the alignment container corresponding to the alignment subject’s start side in the appropriate axis.
- self-end (self)
- Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with the edge of the alignment container corresponding to the alignment subject’s end side in the appropriate axis.
- flex-start (self, content)
-
Only used in flex layout. [CSS-FLEXBOX-1] Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with the edge of the alignment container corresponding to the flex container’s main-start or cross-start side, as appropriate.
When used outside of a flex formatting context, this value behaves as start. That is, on boxes that are not flex items (or pretending to be flex items, such as when determining the static position of an absolutely-positioned box that is a child of a flex container), this value behaves as start when used in the self-alignment properties, and on boxes that are not flex containers, this value behaves as start when used in the content-distribution properties.
- flex-end (self, content)
-
Only used in flex layout. Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with the edge of the alignment container corresponding to the flex container’s main-end or cross-end side, as appropriate.
When used outside of a flex formatting context, this value behaves as end. That is, on boxes that are not flex items (or pretending to be flex items, such as when determining the static position of an absolutely-positioned box that is a child of a flex container), this value behaves as end when used in the self-alignment properties, and on boxes that are not flex containers, this value behaves as end when used in the content-distribution properties.
- left (only justify-*)
-
Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with
the alignment container’s line-left or physical left edge,
whichever is in the appropriate axis.
If the property’s axis is not parallel with either left↔right axis, this value behaves as start. Currently, the only case where the property’s axis is not parallel with either left↔right axis is in a column flexbox.
- right (only justify-*)
-
Aligns the alignment subject to be flush with
the alignment container’s line-right or physical right edge,
whichever is in the appropriate axis.
If the property’s axis is not parallel with either left↔right axis, this value behaves as start. Currently, the only case where the property’s axis is not parallel with either left↔right axis is in a column flexbox.
Two grammar terms are used to denote certain subsets of these values:
- <self-position>
-
This set is used by justify-self and align-self to align the box within its alignment container,
and also by justify-items and align-items (to specify default values for justify-self and align-self).
<self-position> = center | start | end | self-start | self-end | flex-start | flex-end
- <content-position>
-
This set is used by justify-content and align-content to align the box’s contents within itself.
<content-position> = center | start | end | flex-start | flex-end
Note: left and right are excluded from <self-position> and <content-position>, despite being valid positional alignment values for justify-content/justify-self/justify-items, because they are not allowed in the align-* properties. They are instead explicitly included in the justify-* properties’ grammars.
Flexbox, on the other hand, has justify-* align things in the main axis and align-* align things in the cross axis. This depends on the value of flex-direction: when flex-direction is row or row-reverse, it matches the other layout modes (inline axis with justify-*, block axis with align-*); when flex-direction is column or column-reverse, it has the opposite correspondence.
Make it easier to understand the dual-axis nature of "start" and "end" wrt orthogonal flows.
4.2. Baseline Alignment: the baseline keyword and first/last modifiers
See CSS Writing Modes 3 §4.1 Introduction to Baselines.
Baseline alignment is a form of positional alignment that aligns multiple alignment subjects within a shared alignment context (such as cells within a row) by matching up their alignment baselines. If the position of the alignment subjects within a baseline-sharing group is not fully constrained by baseline alignment (i.e., they could be shifted within their respective alignment containers while maintaining baseline-alignment), they are fallback-aligned insofar as possible while preserving their baseline alignment.
The baseline alignment keywords are represented with the <baseline-position> grammar term:
<baseline-position> = [ first | last ]? baseline
The first and last values give a box a baseline alignment preference: either “first” or “last”, respectively, defaulting to “first”.
Values have the following meanings:
- baseline
- Computes to first baseline, defined below.
- first baseline
-
Specifies participation in first-baseline alignment:
aligns the alignment baseline of the box’s first baseline set with the corresponding baseline
of its baseline-sharing group.
See § 9.3 Aligning Boxes by Baseline for more details.
The fallback alignment for first baseline is start.
- last baseline
-
Specifies participation in last-baseline alignment:
aligns the alignment baseline of the box’s last baseline set with the corresponding baseline
of its baseline-sharing group.̣
See § 9.3 Aligning Boxes by Baseline for more details.
The fallback alignment for last baseline is safe end.
When specified for align-content, these values trigger baseline content-alignment, shifting the content of the box within its content box, and may also affect the sizing of the box itself. See § 5.4 Baseline Content-Alignment.
When specified for align-self/justify-self, these values trigger baseline self-alignment, shifting the entire box within its container, which may affect the sizing of its container. See § 6.4 Baseline Self-Alignment.
If both baseline content-alignment and baseline self-alignment are specified in the same axis on the same box, only baseline self-alignment is honored in that axis; the content-alignment in that axis must be treated as start.
If a box does not belong to a shared alignment context, then the fallback alignment is used. For example, align-content: baseline on a block box falls back to start alignment. The fallback alignment is also used to align the baseline-sharing group within its alignment container.
Note: Because they are equivalent, and baseline is shorter, the CSSOM serializes first baseline as baseline. See CSSOM 1 §5.7.2 Serializing CSS Values.
Note: For the somewhat-related vertical-align property, due to inconsistent design decisions in CSS2.1, baseline is not equivalent to first baseline as an inline-level box’s baseline alignment preference depends on display. (E.g., inline-block uses its last baseline by default, while inline-table uses its first baseline by default.)
4.3. Distributed Alignment: the stretch, space-between, space-around, and space-evenly keywords
The distributed alignment values are used by justify-content and align-content to disperse a container’s extra space among its alignment subjects.
When space cannot be distributed in this way, these values behave as their fallback alignment. Each distribution value has an associated default fallback alignment. (A future level of this module may allow the fallback alignment to be specified explicitly.)
- space-between
-
The alignment subjects are evenly distributed in the alignment container.
The first alignment subject is placed flush with the start edge of the alignment container,
the last alignment subject is placed flush with the end edge of the alignment container,
and the remaining alignment subjects are distributed so that the spacing between any two adjacent alignment subjects is the same.
The default fallback alignment for this value is flex-start. (For layout modes other than flex layout, flex-start is identical to start.)
- space-around
-
The alignment subjects are evenly distributed in the alignment container,
with a half-size space on either end.
The alignment subjects are distributed so that the spacing between any two adjacent alignment subjects is the same,
and the spacing before the first and after the last alignment subject is half the size of the other spacing.
The default fallback alignment for this value is center.
- space-evenly
-
The alignment subjects are evenly distributed in the alignment container,
with a full-size space on either end.
The alignment subjects are distributed so that the spacing between any two adjacent alignment subjects,
before the first alignment subject,
and after the last alignment subject is the same.
The default fallback alignment for this value is center.
- stretch
-
If the combined size of the alignment subjects is less than the size of the alignment container,
any auto-sized alignment subjects have their size increased equally (not proportionally),
while still respecting the constraints imposed by max-height/max-width (or equivalent functionality),
so that the combined size exactly fills the alignment container.
The default fallback alignment for this value is flex-start. (For layout modes other than flex layout, flex-start is identical to start.)
These values are represented with the <content-distribution> grammar term:
<content-distribution> = space-between | space-around | space-evenly | stretch
4.4. Overflow Alignment: the safe and unsafe keywords and scroll safety limits
When the alignment subject is larger than the alignment container, it will overflow. Some alignment modes, if honored in this situation, may cause data loss: for example, if the contents of a sidebar are centered, when they overflow they may send part of their boxes past the viewport’s start edge, which can’t be scrolled to.
To control this situation, an overflow alignment mode can be explicitly specified. “Unsafe” alignment honors the specified alignment mode in overflow situations, even if it causes data loss, while “safe” alignment changes the alignment mode in overflow situations in an attempt to avoid data loss. The default behavior is to contain the alignment subject within the scrollable area, though at the time of writing this safety feature is not yet implemented.
<overflow-position> = unsafe | safe
- safe
- If the size of the alignment subject overflows the alignment container, the alignment subject is instead aligned as if the alignment mode were start.
- unsafe
- Regardless of the relative sizes of the alignment subject and alignment container, the given alignment value is honored.
- (no value specified)
-
If the overflow alignment isn’t explicitly specified,
the default overflow alignment is a blend of "safe" and "unsafe"
in that an overflowing alignment subject is allowed to overflow its alignment container,
but if this would cause it to also overflow
the scrollable overflow region of its nearest ancestor scroll container (thus extending into the "unscrollable" region),
then its overflow in that direction is limited
by biasing any remaining overflow to the opposite side.
It may not be Web-compatible to implement the “smart” default behavior (though we hope so, and believe it to be likely), so UAs should pass any feedback on this point to the WG. UAs that have not implemented the “smart” default behavior must behave as unsafe.
5. Content Distribution: Aligning a Box’s Contents Within Itself
Content-distribution controls alignment of the box’s content within its content box. It is specified by the content-distribution properties align-content and justify-content (and their place-content shorthand).
5.1. The justify-content and align-content Properties
Name: | align-content |
---|---|
Value: | normal | <baseline-position> | <content-distribution> | <overflow-position>? <content-position> |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | block containers, multicol containers, flex containers, and grid containers |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | specified keyword(s) |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
Name: | justify-content |
---|---|
Value: | normal | <content-distribution> | <overflow-position>? [ <content-position> | left | right ] |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | multicol containers, flex containers, and grid containers |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | specified keyword(s) |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
Aligns the contents of the box as a whole (as the alignment subject) within the box itself (as the alignment container): along the inline/row/main axis of the box (for justify-content) or the block/column/cross axis of the box (for align-content). Values other than normal are defined in § 4 Alignment Keywords, above.
For all layout modes, the alignment subject and alignment container both assume the writing mode of the box the *-content property is set on.
5.1.1. Block Containers (Including Table Cells)
Alignment Container | The block container’s content box. |
---|---|
Alignment Subject(s) | The entire contents of the block, as a unit. |
align-content Axis | The block axis. If a <content-distribution> is specified its fallback alignment is used instead. |
justify-content Axis | Does not apply to and has no effect on block containers. |
normal Behavior |
All values other than normal force the block container to establish an independent formatting context.
For table cells, the behavior of the normal depends on the computed value of vertical-align: top makes it behave as start, middle makes it behave as center, bottom makes it behave as end, and all other values make it behave as baseline. [CSS2] |
5.1.2. Multicol Containers
Alignment Container | The multi-column container’s content box. |
---|---|
Alignment Subject(s) | The column boxes, with any spacing inserted between column boxes added to the relevant column gaps. |
align-content Axis | The block axis, treating the column boxes (and any column-spanning elements), as a singular unit. If a <content-distribution> is specified its fallback alignment is used instead. |
justify-content Axis | The inline axis. |
normal Behavior |
normal behaves as stretch;
both are defined as described in the column-sizing rules
of [CSS-MULTICOL-1].
In the case of multi-column containers with a non-auto column-width, justify-content values other than normal or stretch cause the columns to take their specified column-width rather than stretching to fill the container. The column boxes are then aligned as specified by justify-content. |
5.1.3. Flex Containers
Alignment Container | The flex container’s content box. |
---|---|
Alignment Subject(s) |
For justify-content,
the flex items in each flex line.
For align-content, the flex lines. Note, this only has an effect on multi-line flex containers. |
align-content Axis | The cross axis. |
justify-content Axis | The justify-content property applies along the main axis, but since stretching in the main axis is controlled by flex, stretch behaves as flex-start. |
normal Behavior | normal behaves as stretch. |
See [CSS-FLEXBOX-1] for details.
5.1.4. Grid Containers
Alignment Container | The grid container’s content box. |
---|---|
Alignment Subject(s) | The grid tracks in the appropriate axis, with any spacing inserted between tracks added to the relevant gutters, and treating collapsed gutters as a single opportunity for space insertion. |
align-content Axis | The block axis, aligning the grid rows. |
justify-content Axis | The inline axis, aligning the grid columns. |
normal Behavior | normal behaves as stretch. |
See [CSS-GRID-1] for details.
5.2. Content-Distribution Shorthand: the place-content property
Name: | place-content |
---|---|
Value: | <'align-content'> <'justify-content'>? |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | block containers, flex containers, and grid containers |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | see individual properties |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
This shorthand property sets both the align-content and justify-content properties in one declaration. The first value is assigned to align-content. The second value is assigned to justify-content; if omitted, it is copied from the first value, unless that value is a <baseline-position> in which case it is defaulted to start.
5.3. Overflow and Scroll Positions
When the content-distribution properties are set on a scroll container with an overflowing alignment subject, rather than shifting the layout positions of its content, they instead change its initial scroll position so that the initially-visible content of the scroll container satisfies the expected alignment of the alignment subject and alignment container.
Note: The presence of scrollbars can change the size of the scroll container’s content box, and thus the size of the alignment container and/or alignment subject.
Because the scroll container’s end-edge padding is not always included in the scrollable overflow region (see CSS Overflow 3 §2.2 Scrollable Overflow), performing such alignment might require that the alignment subject be positioned in a way that would normally not be possible just by scrolling. To resolve this problem (and be consistent across alignment values), all non-normal values of align-content/justify-content cause the scrollable overflow region to be extended in the relevant axis however much would be required to make it possible to scroll to a position satisfying end alignment in that axis. (In general, this means that the scroll container’s padding is added to the bounding rectangle of its in-flow children on both sides of the scrollable overflow region. See [css-overflow-3] for details.)
Coordinate wording with css-overflow once it’s less of a mess.
None of this changes how scroll coordinates are assigned: the origin is still where it would be in a start-aligned container, it just might be initially positioned outside the scrollport.
Note: The alignment subject is not necessarily identical to the scrollable overflow region: content overflowing the alignment subject, such as an absolutely-positioned or out-of-flow element, grows the scrollable overflow region but not the alignment subject, thus an end-aligned scroll container might not be initially scrolled all the way to the bottom.
5.4. Baseline Content-Alignment
The content of boxes participating in row-like layout contexts (shared alignment contexts) can be baseline-aligned to each other. Baseline content-alignment effectively increases the padding on the box to align the alignment baseline of its contents with that of other baseline-aligned boxes in its baseline-sharing group.
Baseline content-alignment can only apply if the align-content axis is parallel with the box’s block axis (i.e. it does not apply to “column” flex containers); otherwise the fallback alignment is used.
The set of boxes that participate in baseline content-alignment depends on the layout model:
- Table Cells:
-
A table cell participates in
first/last baseline content-alignment in its startmost/endmost row
if its inline axis is parallel to that of the table itself and
its computed align-content is first baseline (last baseline).
Note: Baseline content-alignment of cells sharing a column is not supported; however this may be added in a future level if there is sufficient demand and implementer interest.
- Flex Items:
- A flex item participates in first/last baseline content-alignment in its flex line if its computed align-content is first baseline/last baseline and its inline axis is parallel to the main axis.
- Grid Items:
- A grid item participates in first/last baseline content-alignment in its startmost/endmost row or column (whichever is parallel to its inline axis) and if its computed align-content is first baseline/last baseline.
Additionally, if self-alignment applies to the box in an axis, in order to participate in baseline content-alignment in that axis it must also have a coordinated self-alignment preference; that is:
-
The relevant self-alignment property behaves as either stretch or self-start/self-end given a baseline alignment preference of ”first”/“last”. For this purpose, the start, end, flex-start, and flex-end values are treated as either self-start or self-end, whichever they end up equivalent to.
-
Its used self-alignment is not affected by its overflow alignment. (That is, the used self-alignment is what would result from an unsafe overflow alignment.)
It otherwise takes its fallback alignment.
See § 9.3 Aligning Boxes by Baseline for exact details. Baseline content-alignment can increase the intrinsic size of the box.
6. Self-Alignment: Aligning the Box Within Its Parent
Self-alignment controls alignment of the box within its containing block. It is specified by the self-alignment properties align-self and justify-self (and their place-self shorthand).
6.1. Inline/Main-Axis Alignment: the justify-self property
Name: | justify-self |
---|---|
Value: | auto | normal | stretch | <baseline-position> | <overflow-position>? [ <self-position> | left | right ] |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | block-level boxes, absolutely-positioned boxes, and grid items |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | specified keyword(s) |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
Justifies the box (as the alignment subject) within its containing block (as the alignment container) along the inline/row/main axis of the alignment container: the box’s outer edges are aligned within its alignment container as described by its alignment value. Values have the following meanings:
- auto
-
Behaves as normal if the box has no parent, or when determining the actual position of an absolutely positioned box. It behaves as the computed justify-items value of the parent box (minus any legacy keywords) otherwise (including when determining the static position of an absolutely positioned box).
- normal
-
Represents the “default” alignment for the layout mode. Its behavior depends on the layout mode, as described below.
- stretch
-
When the box’s computed width/height (as appropriate to the axis) is auto and neither of its margins (in the appropriate axis) are auto, sets the box’s used size to the length necessary to make its outer size as close to filling the alignment container as possible while still respecting the constraints imposed by min-height/min-width/max-height/max-width.
Unless otherwise specified, this value falls back to flex-start generally, and to self-start or self-end if the box has also specified first baseline or last baseline baseline content-alignment (respectively) in the same axis.
Note: The stretch keyword can cause elements to shrink, to fit their container.
- <baseline-position>
-
Indicates baseline self-alignment, as defined in § 4.2 Baseline Alignment: the baseline keyword and first/last modifiers, § 6.4 Baseline Self-Alignment, and § 9 Baseline Alignment Details.
- <overflow-position>? <self-position>
-
Defined in § 4 Alignment Keywords, above.
Values other than stretch cause a width/height of auto to be treated as fit-content.
Note: auto margins, because they effectively adjust the size of the margin area, take precedence over justify-self.
6.1.1. Block-Level Boxes
justify-self Axis | The block’s containing block’s inline axis. |
---|---|
Alignment Container | The block’s containing block, except that for block-level elements that establish a block formatting context and are placed next to a float, the alignment container is reduced by the space taken up by the float, assuming the writing mode of the containing block. |
Alignment Subject | The block’s margin box, assuming the writing mode of the block. |
normal Behavior | Behaves as stretch. |
Other Details |
In terms of CSS2.1 block-level formatting [CSS2],
the rules for “over-constrained” computations in section 10.3.3 are ignored in favor of alignment as specified here
and the used value of the margin properties are therefore not adjusted to correct for the over-constraint.
This property does not apply to floats. |
6.1.2. Absolutely-Positioned Boxes
This section describes the effect of justify-self on how the margin box of an absolutely-positioned box is positioned with respect to its (absolute-positioning) containing block.
justify-self Axis | The block’s containing block’s inline axis. |
---|---|
Alignment Container | The box’s containing block, as modified by the inset properties (top/right/bottom/left), assuming the writing mode of the containing block. If both inset properties in the relevant axis are auto, then use the box’s static position rectangle (i.e. set both insets to the box’s static position). |
Alignment Subject | The box’s margin box, assuming the writing mode of the box. |
normal Behavior |
Note: This somewhat bizarre behavior is required for compat with the behavior specified in CSS 2.1. |
Other Details |
In terms of CSS2.1 formatting [CSS2],
the rules for “over-constrained” computations in section 10.3.7 are ignored in favor of alignment as specified here,
and the used value of the inset properties are not adjusted to correct for the over-constraint.
Values other than stretch or normal cause non-replaced absolutely-positioned boxes to use fit-content sizing for calculating auto sizes in the affected axis. Note that stretch does cause replaced absolutely-positioned boxes to fill their containing block just as non-replaced ones do. Note: If only one inset property is auto, the computations in CSS2 section 10.3.7 fully determine its size and position, and justify-self has no effect. (If both are auto, then the box is statically-positioned, see above, and can be aligned within the static position rectangle.) |
6.1.3. Table Cells
This property does not apply to table cells, because their position and size is fully constrained by table layout.
6.1.4. Flex Items
This property does not apply to flex items, because there is more than one item in the main axis. See flex for stretching and justify-content for main-axis alignment. [CSS-FLEXBOX-1]
6.1.5. Grid Items
justify-self Axis | The grid’s inline axis. |
---|---|
Alignment Container | The grid item’s grid area, assuming the writing mode of the grid container. |
Alignment Subject | The grid item’s margin box, assuming the writing mode of the grid item. |
normal Behavior | Effectively stretch for items with no intrinsic aspect ratio, and start for items with an intrinsic aspect ratio: see Grid Item Sizing in [CSS-GRID-1]. The resulting box is start-aligned. |
See [CSS-GRID-1] for details.
6.2. Block/Cross-Axis Alignment: the align-self property
Name: | align-self |
---|---|
Value: | auto | normal | stretch | <baseline-position> | <overflow-position>? <self-position> |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | flex items, grid items, and absolutely-positioned boxes |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | specified keyword(s) |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
Aligns the box (as the alignment subject) within its containing block (as the alignment container) along the block/column/cross axis of the alignment container: the box’s outer edges are aligned within its alignment container as described by its alignment value. Values have the following meanings:
- auto
-
Behaves as normal if the box has no parent, or when determining the actual position of an absolutely positioned box. It behaves as the computed align-items value of the parent box (minus any legacy keywords) otherwise (including when determining the static position of an absolutely positioned box).
- normal
-
Represents the “default” alignment for the layout mode, as defined below.
- stretch
-
As defined for justify-self in § 6.1 Inline/Main-Axis Alignment: the justify-self property.
- <baseline-position>
-
Indicates baseline self-alignment, as defined in § 4.2 Baseline Alignment: the baseline keyword and first/last modifiers, § 6.4 Baseline Self-Alignment, and § 9 Baseline Alignment Details.
- <overflow-position>? <self-position>
-
Defined in § 4 Alignment Keywords, above.
Note: auto margins, because they effectively adjust the size of the margin area, take precedence over align-self.
6.2.1. Block-Level Boxes
The align-self property does not apply to block-level boxes (including floats), because there is more than one item in the block axis.
6.2.2. Absolutely-Positioned Boxes
This section describes the effect of align-self on how the margin box of an absolutely-positioned box which is not statically-positioned is positioned with respect to its (absolute-positioning) containing block.
align-self Axis | The box’s containing block’s block axis. |
---|---|
Alignment Container | The box’s containing block, as modified by the inset properties (top/right/bottom/left), assuming the writing mode of the containing block. If both inset properties in the relevant axis are auto, then use the box’s static position rectangle (i.e. set both insets to the box’s static position). |
Alignment Subject | The box’s margin box, assuming the writing mode of the box. |
normal Behavior |
Note: This somewhat bizarre behavior is required for compat with the behavior specified in CSS 2.1. |
Other Details |
In terms of CSS2.1 formatting [CSS2],
the rules for "over-constrained" computations in section 10.6.4 are ignored in favor of alignment as specified here
and the used value of the inset properties are not adjusted to correct for the over-constraint.
Values other than stretch or normal cause non-replaced absolutely-positioned boxes to use fit-content sizing for calculating auto sizes in the affected axis. Note that stretch does cause replaced absolutely-positioned boxes to fill their containing block just as non-replaced ones do. Note: If only one inset property is auto, the computations in CSS2 section 10.6.4 fully determine its size and position, and align-self has no effect. (If both are auto, then the box is statically-positioned, see above, and can be aligned within the static position rectangle.) |
6.2.3. Table Cells
This property does not apply to table cells, because their position and size is fully constrained by table layout.
6.2.4. Flex Items
align-self Axis | The flex container’s cross axis. |
---|---|
Alignment Container | The flex line the flex item is in, assuming the writing mode of the flex container. |
Alignment Subject | The flex item’s margin box, assuming the writing mode of the flex item. |
normal Behavior | Behaves as stretch. |
See [CSS-FLEXBOX-1] for details.
6.2.5. Grid Items
align-self Axis | The grid’s block axis. |
---|---|
Alignment Container | The grid item’s grid area, assuming the writing mode of the grid container. |
Alignment Subject | The grid item’s margin box, assuming the writing mode of the grid item. |
normal Behavior | Behaves as stretch for non-replaced items. For replaced items, see Grid Item Sizing in [CSS-GRID-1]. |
6.3. Self-Alignment Shorthand: the place-self property
Name: | place-self |
---|---|
Value: | <'align-self'> <'justify-self'>? |
Initial: | auto |
Applies to: | block-level boxes, absolutely-positioned boxes, and grid items |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | see individual properties |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
This shorthand property sets both the align-self and justify-self properties in a single declaration. The first value is assigned to align-self. The second value is assigned to justify-self; if omitted, it is copied from the first value.
6.4. Baseline Self-Alignment
Boxes participating in row-like layout contexts (shared alignment contexts) can be baseline-aligned to each other. Baseline self-alignment effectively increases the margins on the box to align its alignment baseline with that of other baseline-aligned boxes in its baseline-sharing group.
The set of boxes that participate in baseline self-alignment depends on the layout model:
- Flex Items:
- A flex item participates in first/last baseline self-alignment in its flex line if its computed align-self is first baseline/last baseline. See [CSS-FLEXBOX-1] for details.
- Grid Items:
- A grid item participates in first/last baseline self-alignment in its startmost/endmost row or column if its align-self or justify-self property (respectively) computes to first baseline/last baseline.
See § 9.3 Aligning Boxes by Baseline for exact details. Baseline self-alignment can increase the intrinsic size contribution of the box.
6.5. Effects on Sizing of Absolutely Positioned Boxes with Static-Position Insets
For absolutely-positioned boxes whose inline-axis offsets are both auto, the available space for calculating the inline size is also affected by alignment.
In [CSS2], this is keyed off of the the direction property of the static-position containing block. (See CSS2§10.3.7 and CSS2§10.3.8.) Fundamentally these rules set one of the auto insets (by default, the start-edge inset) to the corresponding edge of the static position rectangle and the other to the corresponding edge of the containing block (i.e. set the inset to zero).
Just as the self-alignment properties replace the containing block’s direction for placement, they also replace this lookup for sizing. Thus, when interpreting the rules in CSS2§10.3.7 and CSS2§10.3.8, wherever the direction property of the static-position containing block is referenced, instead reference the value of the align-self or justify-self property (whichever is defined to apply to the relevant axis), treating normal as start and any distributed alignment value as its fallback alignment.
Note: The align-self/justify-self properties can also modify additional aspects of sizing: for example, justify-self: stretch will replace “shrink-to-fit” (fit-content) sizing into the available space with stretch-fit sizing (consuming all of the available space). This is an independent effect from the available space adjustment here.
7. Default Alignment
The align-items and justify-items properties (and their place-items shorthand) set the default align-self and justify-self behavior of the element’s child boxes.
7.1. Inline/Main-Axis Alignment: the justify-items property
Name: | justify-items |
---|---|
Value: | normal | stretch | <baseline-position> | <overflow-position>? [ <self-position> | left | right ] | legacy | legacy && [ left | right | center ] |
Initial: | legacy |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | specified keyword(s), except for legacy (see prose) |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
This property specifies the default justify-self for all of the child boxes (including anonymous boxes) participating in this box’s formatting context. Values have the following meanings:
- legacy
-
This keyword causes the value to effectively inherit into descendants.
If the legacy keyword appears on its own (without an accompanying left, right, or center keyword): if the inherited value of justify-items includes the legacy keyword, this value computes to the inherited value; otherwise it computes to normal.
When justify-self:auto references the value of justify-items, only the alignment keyword, not the legacy keyword, is referenced by it. It exists to implement the legacy alignment behavior of HTML’s
<center>
element andalign
attribute.
Other values have no special handling and are merely referenced by justify-self.
7.2. Block/Cross-Axis Alignment: the align-items property
Name: | align-items |
---|---|
Value: | normal | stretch | <baseline-position> | [ <overflow-position>? <self-position> ] |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | specified keyword(s) |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
This property specifies the default align-self for all of the child boxes (including anonymous boxes) participating in this box’s formatting context.
Values have no special handling and are merely referenced by align-self.
7.3. Self-Alignment Shorthand: the place-items property
Name: | place-items |
---|---|
Value: | <'align-items'> <'justify-items'>? |
Initial: | see individual properties |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | n/a |
Computed value: | see individual properties |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | discrete |
This shorthand property sets both the align-items and justify-items properties in a single declaration. The first value is assigned to align-items. The second value is assigned to justify-items; if omitted, it is copied from the first value.
8. Gaps Between Boxes
While margin and padding can be used to specify visual spacing around individual boxes, it’s sometimes more convenient to globally specify spacing between adjacent boxes within a given layout context, particularly when the spacing is different between boxes as opposed to between the first/last box and the container’s edge.
The gap property, and its row-gap and column-gap sub-properties, provide this functionality for multi-column, flex, and grid layout.
8.1. Row and Column Gutters: the row-gap and column-gap properties
Name: | row-gap, column-gap |
---|---|
Value: | normal | <length-percentage> |
Initial: | normal |
Applies to: | multi-column containers, flex containers, grid containers |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | refer to corresponding dimension of the content area |
Computed value: | specified keyword, else a computed <length-percentage> value |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | by computed value type |
These properties specify fixed-length gutters between items in the container,
adding space between them—
Values have the following meanings:
- <length-percentage>
-
Specifies a gap between “rows” or “columns”, as defined by the layout modes to which it applies; see subsections below for details.
Negative values are invalid. As in the min size properties and margins/paddings [CSS-SIZING-3], percentages resolve against zero for determining intrinsic size contributions, but resolve against the box’s content box when laying out the box’s contents.
- normal
-
The normal represents a used value of 1em on multi-column containers, and a used value of 0px in all other contexts.
Gutters effect a minimum spacing between items: additional spacing may be added by justify-content/align-content. Such additional space effectively increases the size of these gutters.
The exact handling of these properties varies by layout container:
- multi-column containers
- column-gap specifes the gutter between adjacent column boxes. See [CSS-MULTICOL-1] for details on how this affects the layout of multicol elements. row-gap does not currently apply.
- flex containers
-
When applied to the main axis (e.g. column-gap in a row flex container),
indicates minimum spacing between items
(as if an additional fixed-size margin were inserted
between adjacent flex items in a single line).
When applied to the cross axis (e.g. row-gap in a row flex container), indicates minimum spacing between adjacent flex lines.
- grid containers
- The row-gap and column-gap properties, when specified on a grid container, define the gutters between grid rows and grid columns, respectively. See CSS Grid Layout 1 §10.1 Gutters: the row-gap, column-gap, and gap properties for precise details.
Note: Table boxes do not use the gap properties to specify separation between their cells. Instead, they use the border-spacing property, which has slightly different functionality: it inherits, and it also specifies the additional spacing between the outermost cells and the border of the table (similar to space-evenly rather than space-between).
8.2. Gap Shorthand: the gap property
Name: | gap |
---|---|
Value: | <'row-gap'> <'column-gap'>? |
Initial: | see individual properties |
Applies to: | multi-column containers, flex containers, grid containers |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | refer to corresponding dimension of the content area |
Computed value: | see individual properties |
Canonical order: | per grammar |
Animation type: | by computed value type |
This property is a shorthand that sets row-gap and column-gap in one declaration. If <'column-gap'> is omitted, it’s set to the same value as <'row-gap'>.
Note: The gap property is only one component of the visible “gutter” or “alley” created between boxes. Margins, padding, or the use of distributed alignment may increase the visible separation between boxes beyond what is specified in gap.
8.3. Legacy Gap Properties: the grid-row-gap, grid-column-gap, and grid-gap properties
The Grid Layout module was originally written with its own set of gutter properties, before all such properties were unified into the existing row-gap/column-gap naming. For compatibility with legacy content, those legacy property names must be supported as aliases:
-
grid-row-gap must be treated as a shorthand for the row-gap property
-
grid-column-gap must be treated as a shorthand for the column-gap property
-
grid-gap must be treated as a shorthand for the gap property
In all three cases, the legacy properties must take the same grammar as the property they are aliasing, and just "forward" the value to their aliased property.
9. Baseline Alignment Details
Boxes in a baseline-sharing group are aligned to each other using their alignment baselines. For example, in horizontal writing modes, specifying align-content: baseline on table cells in the same row will align the baselines of their first formatted lines. This section defines exactly how baseline alignment is performed in consideration of the myriad baselines and writing modes that exist in internationalized modern CSS.
A baseline set is a set of baselines (alphabetic, central, etc.) associated with a common baseline table. Typically, a typesetting tradition will use only one of these, but different writing systems use different baselines, and mixing writing systems can result in using more than one within a single line. Refer to CSS Writing Modes 3 §4.1 Introduction to Baselines for more information on baselines and writing modes.
9.1. Determining the Baselines of a Box
Each box, for a given axis, has a first baseline set (and last baseline set) that nominally corresponds to the baseline set of the first/last line of text within the box. The alignment baseline is one of these, usually the dominant baseline associated with the shared alignment context. (See the dominant-baseline and alignment-baseline properties in [CSS-INLINE-3].)
The first and last baseline sets of a box are determined differently based on the layout model, as follows:
- block containers
-
The first/last baseline set of a block container is generated from the dominant first/last baseline
of the first/last in-flow line box in the block container,
or is taken from the first/last in-flow block-level child in the block container
that contributes a set of first/last baselines,
whichever comes first/last.
If there is no such line box or child,
then the block container has no baseline set.
However, for legacy reasons, if an inline-block is a scroll container or contains no in-flow line boxes, its first and last baseline sets are synthesized from its margin box.
- multi-column containers
-
The first baseline set of a multi-column container is generated from the dominant first baseline
of the first in-flow line box in the first column box,
or is taken from the first in-flow block-level child
that contributes a set of first baselines,
whichever comes first.
If there is no such line box or child,
then the multi-column container has no first baseline set.
Multi-column containers have no last baseline set.
- tables
-
The first/last baseline set of a table box
is the first/last baseline set of its first/last row.
When finding the first/last baseline set of an inline-block, any baselines contributed by table boxes must be skipped. (This quirk is a legacy behavior from [CSS2].)
- table rows
- If any cells in the row participate in first baseline/last baseline alignment along the inline axis, the first/last baseline set of the row is generated from their shared alignment baseline and the row’s first available font, after alignment has been performed. Otherwise, the first/last baseline set of the row is synthesized from the lowest and highest content edges of the cells in the row. [CSS2]
- flex containers
- See Flex Baselines in [CSS-FLEXBOX-1].
- grid containers
- See Grid Baselines in [CSS-GRID-1].
To generate baselines for a box from a single baseline, use the baseline table from the font settings and first available font of that box, and align that baseline set to the given single baseline.
To synthesize baselines from a rectangle (or two parallel lines), synthesize the alphabetic baseline from the line-under line, and the central baseline by averaging the positions of the two edges or lines. See CSS Inline Layout 3 § Synthesizing Alignment Metrics for rules on synthesizing additional baselines.
Note: The edges used to synthesize baselines from a box depend on their formatting context: inline-level boxes synthesize from their margin edges [CSS-INLINE-3], table cells synthesize from their content edges [CSS2], and grid and flex items synthesize from their border edges [CSS-GRID-1] [CSS-FLEXBOX-1].
In general, the writing mode of the box, shape, or other object being aligned is used to determine the line-under and line-over edges for synthesis. However, when that writing mode’s block flow direction is parallel to the axis of the alignment context, an axis-compatible writing mode must be assumed:
-
If the box establishing the alignment context has a block flow direction that is orthogonal to the axis of the , use its writing mode.
-
Otherwise, assume either horizontal-tb or vertical-lr writing-mode, whichever is orthogonal to the box’s own writing-mode.
For the purposes of finding the baselines of a box, it and all its in-flow descendants with a scrolling mechanism (see the overflow property) must be considered as if scrolled to their initial scroll position. Furthermore, if, in the case of a scroll container box, the resulting position of a first/last baseline is past a box’s end/start border edge, its position is clamped to that border edge.
9.2. Baseline Alignment Grouping
A baseline-sharing group is composed of boxes that participate in baseline alignment together. This is possible only if they both:
- Share an alignment context along an axis perpendicular to the axis they’re being baseline-aligned in. (For example, grid items with align-self: baseline are baseline-aligning along the grid’s block axis, and therefore participate with other items in their row.)
- Have compatible baseline alignment preferences (i.e., the baselines that want to align are on the same side of the alignment context).
Note: Boxes participating in baseline content-alignment and boxes participating in baseline self-alignment can be part of the same baseline-sharing group, and can thus align to each other. The difference between the two methods is in where extra space is inserted to perform the alignment (inside or outside the box’s own border).
Boxes share an alignment context, along a particular axis, and established by a particular box, when they are:
- table cells in the same row, along the table’s row (inline) axis, established by the row box
- grid items in the same row, along the grid’s row (inline) axis, established by the grid container
- grid items in the same column, along the grid’s column (block) axis, established by the grid container
- flex items in the same flex line, along the flex container’s main axis, established by the flex container
Note: Conceptually, the inline-level boxes in a line box also share a self-alignment context and participate in a baseline-sharing group; however they only baseline-align in response to the vertical-align property, not any of the properties defined in this module. See [CSS-INLINE-3].
If a box spans multiple shared alignment contexts, then it participates in first/last baseline alignment within its start-most/end-most along that axis. For example, a table cell spanning three rows participates in first-baseline alignment with the table cells in the first row that it spans, or alternatively in last-baseline alignment with the table cells in the last row that it spans.
The baseline alignment preferences of two boxes in a baseline-sharing group are compatible if they have:
-
the same block flow direction and baseline alignment preference
-
opposite block flow direction and opposite baseline alignment preference
9.3. Aligning Boxes by Baseline
Given a set of alignment subjects and their baselines that all belong to a single baseline-sharing group, the alignment subjects are baseline-aligned as follows:
First, generate the baseline-sharing group’s baseline table from the first available font of the group’s alignment context and overlay also the mirror of this baseline table by aligning their central baselines. These are the baseline “grids” to which the alignment subjects will align.
Next, align each alignment subject by its specified alignment baseline to the group’s baseline table or its mirror, whichever matches the alignment subject’s line orientation. Unless otherwise specified (e.g. via the alignment-baseline property), the alignment baseline is the dominant baseline of the alignment context.
Position the aligned baseline-sharing group within the alignment container according to the fallback alignment associated with the specified baseline alignment preference. For first/last baseline content-alignment, then add the minimum necessary extra space between the alignment container’s start/end content edge and the alignment subject’s edge to align the start/end margin edges of all the alignment containers in the alignment context while maintaining baseline alignment within the baseline-sharing group.
10. Appendix A: Static Position Terminology
When both inset properties in a given axis are auto on an absolutely positioned box, CSS2 uses its static position to resolve its size and position. See CSS 2.1 §10.3.7 Absolutely positioned, non-replaced elements. The box alignment properties modify these calculations, just as they do the sizing and positioning calculations in other layout modes. These modifications refer to a static position rectangle, whose edges represent the static position of the box from each side of its containing block.
The static position rectangle and the static positions to which it corresponds are defined by the layout model of its “hypothetical box”:
- Block Layout
- The static positions of a block-level box are defined in [CSS2] Chapter 10. The static position rectangle is a zero-thickness rectangle spanning between the inline-axis sides of the box’s static-position containing block (see CSS2§10.3.7); and positioned at its block-start static position (see CSS2§10.6.4).
- Inline Layout
- The static positions of a inline-level box are defined in [CSS2] Chapter 10. The static position rectangle is a zero-thickness rectangle spanning between the line-over/line-under sides of the line box that would have contained its “hypothetical box” (see CSS2§10.3.7); and positioned at its inline-start static position
- Flex Layout
- The static position rectangle of the child of a flex container corresponds to the content edges of the flex container. See static position of a grid container child in [CSS-FLEXBOX-1].
- Grid Layout
- By default, the static position rectangle of the child of a grid container corresponds to the content edges of the grid container. However, if that grid container also establishes the box’s actual containing block, then the grid area specified by the grid-placement properties instead establishes its static position rectangle. See the static position of a grid container child in [CSS-GRID-1].
11. Changes
Changes since the 30 August 2018 Working Draft consist of some minor clarifications.
Changes since the 23 April 2018 Working Draft include:
- Better definition of how the alignment properties interact with absolutely-positioned boxes with auto offsets. See § 6.1.2 Absolutely-Positioned Boxes, § 6.2.2 Absolutely-Positioned Boxes, § 6.5 Effects on Sizing of Absolutely Positioned Boxes with Static-Position Insets, and § 10 Appendix A: Static Position Terminology.
- More detailed definition of how the content-distribution properties work on scroll containers. See § 5.3 Overflow and Scroll Positions.
- Noted CSS2’s special rules about the baselines of inline-block scroll containers.
- Defined that percentage gaps compute against zero when calculating intrinsic sizes, and resolve during layout. (Issue 509)
- Miscellaneous minor clarifications.
Changes since the 6 September 2017 Working Draft include:
- Added more illustrations! Many thanks to Melanie Richards for working through a difficult diagramming problem.
- Fixed errors in property definition table of gap shorthand.
- Defining percentage gaps to resolve to zero when the containing block’s size depends on the gaps. (Issue 509, Issue 2297)
- Fixed errors in handling left and right in the grammars.
- Fixed discrepency in space-align fallback alignment. (Issue 2316)
- Tightened up handling of baseline alignment in cases where the box edges don’t align. (Issue 1556, Issue 1611)
- Miscellaneous clarifications.
Changes since the 20 July 2017 Working Draft include:
- Added the row-gap and column-gap properties and gap shorthand, applying them to both grid layout and flex layout to replace the grid-specific grid-row-gap/grid-column-gap/grid-gap properties.
Changes since the 15 May 2017 Working Draft include:
- Dropped the left and right keywords from align-self and align-content. They may be re-introduced in a later level if there is demand. (Issue 1403)
- Assigned end fallback alignment to stretch cases when combined with last baseline content-alignment.
- Disabled baseline alignment across cells in a table column, due to implementation complexity.
- A large number of minor corrections and clarifications reported by David Baron.
Changes since the 7 April 2017 Working Draft include:
- Adding a section to clarify handling of partial implementations. (Issue 1167)
- Dropped <baseline-position> value of justify-content since it can’t do anything anyway. (Issue 1184)
- Deferred ability to specify fallback alignments to Level 4. (Issue 1002)
- Fixed position of <overflow-position> wrt <content-position>. (Issue 1001)
- Fixed rules for handling baseline-aligned boxes being aligned along their block axis. (Issue 1038)
- Renamed justify-items: auto to justify-items: legacy. (Issue 1318)
- Clamped baselines of scrollable boxes to the border edge, rather than margin edge. (Issue 766)
12. Privacy and Security Considerations
As a simple layout spec, this introduces no new privacy or security considerations.
Acknowledgments
Special thanks goes to David Baron, Javier Fernandez, Markus Mielke, Alex Mogilevsky, and the participants in the CSSWG’s March 2008 F2F alignment discussions for their contributions to the alignment model described herein, and to Melanie Richards for her illustrations of the various alignment keywords.