1. Introduction
In CSS Level 1 [CSS1], placing more content than would fit inside an element with a specified size was generally an authoring error. Doing so caused the content to extend outside the bounds of the element, which would likely cause that content to overlap with other elements.
CSS Level 2 [CSS21] introduced the overflow property, which allows authors to have overflow be handled by scrolling, which means it is no longer an authoring error. It also allows authors to specify that overflow is handled by clipping, which makes sense when the author’s intent is that the content not be shown.
This specification introduces the long-standing de-facto overflow-x and overflow-y properties, and defines overflow handling more fully.
[Something something max-lines.]
2. Types of overflow
CSS uses the term overflow#overflowReferenced in:2. Types of overflow (2)3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) to describe the contents of a box that extend outside one of that box’s edges (i.e., its content edge, padding edge, border edge, or margin edge). The term might be interpreted as elements or features that cause this overflow, the non-rectangular region occupied by these features, or, more commonly, the minimal rectangle that bounds that region. A box’s overflow is computed based on the layout and styling of the box itself and of all descendants whose containing block chain includes the box.
In most cases, overflow can be computed for any box from the bounds and properties of that box itself, plus the overflow of each of its children. However, this is not always the case; for example, when transform-style: preserve-3d [CSS3-TRANSFORMS] is used on some of the children, any of their descendants with transform-style: preserve-3d must also be examined.
There are three different types of overflow, which are used for different purposes by the UA:
2.1. Ink overflow
The ink overflow#ink-overflowReferenced in:2. Types of overflow2.1. Ink overflow (2)3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties of a box is the part of that box and its contents that creates a visual effect outside of the box’s border box. Ink overflow is the overflow of painting effects defined to not affect layout or otherwise extend the scrollable overflow region, such as box shadows, border images, text decoration, overhanging glyphs (with negative side bearings, or with ascenders/descenders extending outside the em box), outlines, etc.
What about hanging-punctuation?
Since some effects in CSS (for example, the blurs in text-shadow [CSS3TEXT] and box-shadow [CSS3BG]) do not define what visual extent they cover, the extent of the ink overflow is undefined.
The ink overflow region#ink-overflow-regionReferenced in:2.1. Ink overflow is the non-rectangular area occupied by the ink overflow, and the ink overflow rectangle#ink-overflow-rectangleReferenced in:2.1. Ink overflow is the minimal rectangle whose axis is aligned to the box’s axes and contains the ink overflow region. Note that the ink overflow rectangle is a rectangle in the box’s coordinate system, but might be non-rectangular in other coordinate systems due to transforms [CSS3-TRANSFORMS].
2.2. Scrollable overflow
The scrollable overflow#scrollable-overflowReferenced in:2. Types of overflow2.2. Scrollable overflow (2)3.3. Scrolling Origin, Direction, and Restriction of a box is the set of things extending outside of that box’s padding edge for which a scrolling mechanism needs to be provided.
The scrollable overflow region#scrollable-overflow-regionReferenced in:2.1. Ink overflow2.2. Scrollable overflow (2) (3)3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties3.3. Scrolling Origin, Direction, and Restriction (2) is the non-rectangular region occupied by the scrollable overflow, and the scrollable overflow rectangle#scrollable-overflow-rectangleReferenced in:2.2. Scrollable overflow is the minimal rectangle whose axis is aligned to the box’s axes and contains the scrollable overflow region.
The scrollable overflow region is the union of:
- the box’s own content and padding areas
- all line boxes directly contained by the box
- the margin boxes unioned with the border boxes of all boxes for which it is the containing block (accounting for transforms as described below). Issue: Only Blink (and presumably WebKit) use the margin box for abspos; other browsers use the border box. Can we convince everyone else to change? Because using the border box is kindof hostile.
- the scrollable overflow regions of all of the above boxes (accounting for transforms as described below), provided they themselves have overflow: visible (i.e. do not themselves trap the overflow) and that overflow is not already clipped by the clip or clip-path properties.
The following definition should be rewritten to use the concept of 3D rendering context [CSS3-TRANSFORMS] and related terms, particularly once those concepts stabilize following changes proposed in the CSS WG meeting on the morning of 2014-01-28.
Given the following definitions which belong in [CSS3-TRANSFORMS]:
- 3d-preserving child#3d-preserving-childReferenced in:2.2. Scrollable overflow (2)
- A child box B of a containing block C is a 3d-preserving child if it has transform-style: preserve-3d and the user-agent is not required to flatten it based on the requirements in [CSS3-TRANSFORMS].
- non-3d-preserving child#non-3d-preserving-childReferenced in:2.2. Scrollable overflow
- A child C of a box P is a non-3d-preserving-child if it is not a 3d-preserving child.
- 3d-preserving descendant#3d-preserving-descendantReferenced in:2.2. Scrollable overflow (2) (3)
- Box D is a 3d-preserving descendant of box A if A is an ancestor of D, and D and all of the boxes (if any) in the containing block chain from D to A are 3d-preserving child boxes.
The scrollable overflow of a box is the union of the following things, all adjusted for transforms undefined concept! into the box’s coordinate space:
-
for the box and all of its 3d-preserving descendant boxes:
- the box’s own padding edge (for the box itself) or border edge (for 3d-preserving descendant boxes)
- the bounds undefined term! of any text directly in the box
- MORE HERE!
- for all the non-3d-preserving child boxes of the box and its 3d-preserving descendant boxes, the scrollable overflow of the box
I wrote this definition off the top of my head, so it can’t possibly be right. It’s missing tons of pieces!
The handling of preserve-3d subtrees here is probably wrong; the elements should probably count only towards the overflow of the element that flattens them.
Note that the scrollable overflow rectangle is a always rectangle in the box’s own coordinate system, but might be non-rectangular in other coordinate systems due to transforms [CSS3-TRANSFORMS].
Browsers seem to agree on using axis-aligned rectangles (in the element’s own coord space) to determine overflow. This means scrollbars can appear when not actually necessary. See testcase (adjust the scale(.9) to scale(.7) to see the scrollbars disappear, as the blue grandchild is no longer growing the bounds of the green child). Is this behavior we want to spec, or is it something browsers would like to fix someday?
2.3. Border box overflow
This concept has been proposed for some uses, such as for determining what the outline property goes around, and as the basis of a coordinate system for specifying clips and masks, but it’s not clear if it’s needed.
The border-box overflow#border-box-overflowReferenced in:2. Types of overflow2.3. Border box overflow of a box is the union of the box’s border edge and the border edges of the box’s descendants.
If needed, define more formally, as for scrollable overflow above. (Maybe even share the definitions in an appropriate way!)
The border-box overflow region#border-box-overflow-regionReferenced in:2.3. Border box overflow is the non-rectangular region occupied by the border-box overflow, and the border-box overflow rectangle#border-box-overflow-rectangleReferenced in:2.3. Border box overflow is the minimal rectangle whose axis is aligned to the box’s axes and contains the border-box overflow region. Note that the border-box overflow rectangle is a rectangle in the box’s coordinate system, but might be non-rectangular in other coordinate systems due to transforms [CSS3-TRANSFORMS].
3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties
These properties specify whether a box’s content (including any ink overflow) is clipped to its padding edge, and if so, whether it is a scrollable box#scrollable-boxReferenced in:3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3) (4) (5)3.3. Scrolling Origin, Direction, and Restriction that allows the user to scroll clipped parts of its scrollable overflow region into view.
| Name: | overflow-x#propdef-overflow-xReferenced in:1. Introduction3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3)3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation (2)3.3. Scrolling Origin, Direction, and Restriction, overflow-y#propdef-overflow-yReferenced in:1. Introduction3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3)3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation (2)3.3. Scrolling Origin, Direction, and Restriction |
|---|---|
| Value: | visible | | clip | scroll | auto |
| Initial: | visible |
| Applies to: | block containers [CSS21], flex containers [CSS3-FLEXBOX], and grid containers [CSS3-GRID-LAYOUT] |
| Inherited: | no |
| Percentages: | N/A |
| Media: | visual |
| Computed value: | see below |
| Animatable: | no |
The overflow-x property specifies the handling of overflow in the horizontal direction (i.e., overflow from the left and right sides of the box), and the overflow-y property specifies the handling of overflow in the vertical direction (i.e., overflow from the top and bottom sides of the box).
| Name: | overflow#propdef-overflowReferenced in:1. Introduction2.2. Scrollable overflow3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation (2) (3)5. Overflow in static media |
|---|---|
| Value: | visible | | clip | scroll | auto |
| Initial: | see individual properties |
| Applies to: | block containers [CSS21], flex containers [CSS3-FLEXBOX], and grid containers [CSS3-GRID-LAYOUT] |
| Inherited: | no |
| Percentages: | N/A |
| Media: | visual |
| Computed value: | see individual properties |
| Animatable: | no |
| Canonical order: | per grammar |
The overflow property is a shorthand property that sets the specified values of both overflow-x and overflow-y to the value specified for overflow.
Values have the following meanings:
- visible#valdef-overflow-visibleReferenced in:3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3) (4)3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation (2) (3) (4) (5) (6)
- There is no special handling of overflow, that is, it may be rendered outside the box. The box is not a scrollable box.
- hidden#valdef-overflow-hiddenReferenced in:3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3)
- This value indicates that the box’s content is clipped to its padding box and that no scrolling user interface should be provided by the UA to view the content outside the clipping region. However, the content may still be scrolled programatically, for example using the mechanisms defined in [CSSOM-VIEW], and the box is therefore still a scrollable box.
- clip#valdef-overflow-clipReferenced in:3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2) (3)3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation
-
Like hidden,
this value indicates that
the box’s content is clipped to its padding box
and that no scrolling user interface should be provided by the UA
to view the content outside the clipping region.
In addition, unlike overflow: hidden which still allows programmatic scrolling, overflow: clip forbids scrolling entirely,
through any mechanism,
and therefore the box is not a scrollable box.
Mozilla implements -moz-hidden-unscrollable, which is similar to clip, except that it does not cause the element to establish a BFC. Should we match that?
- scroll#valdef-overflow-scrollReferenced in:3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2)
- This value indicates that the content is clipped to the padding box, but can be scrolled into view (and therefore the box is a scrollable box). Furthermore, if the user agent uses a scrolling mechanism that is visible on the screen (such as a scroll bar or a panner), that mechanism should be displayed whether or not any of its content is clipped. This avoids any problem with scrollbars appearing and disappearing in a dynamic environment. When this value is specified and the target medium is print, overflowing content may be printed.
- auto#valdef-overflow-autoReferenced in:3. Scrollable Overflow: the overflow-x, overflow-y, and overflow properties (2)3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation (2)
- This value indicates that the box’s content is clipped to the padding box, but can be scrolled into view (and therefore the box is a scrollable box). However, if the user agent uses a scrolling mechanism that is visible on the screen (such as a scroll bar or a panner), that mechanism should only be displayed if there is overflow.
If the computed value of overflow on a block box is not visible, it creates a new block formatting context for its content.
3.1. Overflow Value Computation and Propagation
The computed values of overflow-x and overflow-y are determined from the specified values [CSS3CASCADE] based on the following rules:
- If one specified value is visible and the other is not, then computed values are the specified values with visible changed to auto.
- Otherwise, if both specified values are visible and the computed value of contain is one that activates paint containment (e.g. contain:strict or contain: paint or contain: layout paint…), then the computed values of both overflow-x and overflow-y are changed to clip.
- Otherwise, the computed values are as specified.
UAs must apply the overflow property
set on the root element to the viewport.
For HTML UAs,
if this would result in the viewport having visible overflow,
the UA must instead apply the overflow property
set on the body element to the viewport.
In either case,
the used value of overflow for the element from which the value is propagated
must evaluate to visible.
If this application would result in the viewport having visible overflow, the UA must instead treat the viewport as having auto overflow.
3.2. Scrollbars and Layout
In the case of a scrollbar being placed on an edge of the element’s box, it should be inserted between the inner border edge and the outer padding edge. Any space taken up by the scrollbars should be taken out of (subtracted from the dimensions of) the containing block formed by the element with the scrollbars.
import examples from [CSS3-BOX].
3.3. Scrolling Origin, Direction, and Restriction
The initial scroll position, that is, the initial position of the box’s scrollable overflow region with respect to its border box, prior to any user or programmatic scrolling that changes it, is dependent on the box’s writing mode, and is by default the block-start/inline-start edge of the box’s padding edge. However, the align-content and justify-content properties [CSS-ALIGN-3] can be used to change this.
Due to Web-compatibility constraints (caused by authors exploiting legacy bugs to surreptitiously hide content from visual readers but not search engines and/or speech output), UAs must clip the scrollable overflow region of scrollable boxes on the block-start and inline-start sides of the box (thereby behaving as if they had no scrollable overflow on that side).
The viewport uses the principal writing mode for these calculations.
[CSS3-MARQUEE] describes an overflow-style property, but it has not picked up implementation experience that the working group is aware of. Should this document treat overflow-style as a defunct proposal, or should this document describe the overflow-style property and attempt to revive it, despite that implementations have implemented overflow-x and overflow-y instead?
4. Limiting Number of Visible Text Lines: the max-lines property
| Name: | max-lines#propdef-max-linesReferenced in:1. Introduction4. Limiting Number of Visible Text Lines: the max-lines property (2) |
|---|---|
| Value: | none | <integer> |
| Initial: | none |
| Applies to: | all non-inline elements |
| Inherited: | no |
| Percentages: | N/A |
| Media: | visual |
| Computed value: | specified value |
| Animatable: | as integer |
Add back max-lines, so we can kill the unspecified WebKit feature that does this poorly.
5. Overflow in static media
This specification should define useful behavior for all values of overflow in static media (such as print). Current implementation behavior is quite poor and produces unexpected results when authors have not considered what will happen when the content they produce for interactive media is printed.
6. Privacy and Security Considerations
This specification introduces no new privacy or security concerns.
Acknowledgments
Thanks especially to the feedback from Rossen Atanassov, Bert Bos, Tantek Çelik, John Daggett, fantasai, Daniel Glazman, Vincent Hardy, Håkon Wium Lie, Peter Linss, Robert O’Callahan, Florian Rivoal, Alan Stearns, Steve Zilles, and all the rest of the www-style community.