Contents
Generally, the content of a block box is confined to the content edges of the box. In certain cases, a box may overflow, meaning its content lies partly or entirely outside of the box, e.g.:
Whenever overflow occurs, the 'overflow' property specifies whether a box is clipped to its content box, and if so, whether a scrolling mechanism is provided to access any clipped out content.
Value: | visible | hidden | scroll | auto | inherit |
Initial: | visible |
Applies to: | block-level and replaced elements, table cells, inline blocks |
Inherited: | no |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
This property specifies whether content of a block-level element is clipped when it overflows the element's box. It affects the clipping of all of the element's content except any descendant elements (and their respective content and descendants) whose containing block is the viewport or an ancestor of the element. Values have the following meanings:
Even if 'overflow' is set to 'visible', content may be clipped to a UA's document window by the native operating environment.
HTML UAs may apply the overflow property from the BODY or HTML elements to the viewport.
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.
Consider the following example of a block quotation
(<blockquote>
) that is too big
for its containing block (established by a <div>
). Here is
the source document:
<div>
<blockquote>
<p>I didn't like the play, but then I saw
it under adverse conditions - the curtain was up.</p>
<cite>- Groucho Marx</cite>
</blockquote>
</div>
Here is the style sheet controlling the sizes and style of the generated boxes:
div { width : 100px; height: 100px; border: thin solid red; } blockquote { width : 125px; height : 100px; margin-top: 50px; margin-left: 50px; border: thin dashed black } cite { display: block; text-align : right; border: none }
The initial value of 'overflow' is 'visible', so
the <blockquote>
would be formatted without clipping, something like this:
Setting 'overflow' to
'hidden' for the <div>
, on the other hand, causes the
<blockquote>
to be clipped by the containing block:
A value of 'scroll' would tell UAs that support a visible scrolling mechanism to display one so that users could access the clipped content.
Finally, consider this case where an absolutely positioned element is mixed with an overflow parent.
Stylesheet:
container { position: relative; border: solid; }
scroller { overflow: scroll; height: 5em; margin: 5em; }
satellite { position: absolute; top: 0; }
body { height: 10em; }
Document fragment:
<container>
<scroller>
<satellite/>
<body/>
</scroller>
</container>
In this example, the "scroller" element will not scroll the "satellite" element, because the latter's containing block is outside the element whose overflow is being clipped and scrolled.
A clipping region defines what portion of an element's border box is visible. By default, the clipping region has the same size and shape as the element's border box. However, the clipping region may be modified by the 'clip' property.
The 'clip' property applies only to absolutely positioned elements. Values have the following meanings:
<top>, <right>, <bottom>, and <left> may either have a <length> value or 'auto'. Negative lengths are permitted. The value 'auto' means that a given edge of the clipping region will be the same as the edge of the element's generated border box (i.e., 'auto' means the same as '0' for <top> and <left> (in left-to-right text, <right> in right-to-left text), the same as the computed value of the height plus the sum of vertical padding and border widths for <bottom>, and the same as the computed value of the width plus the sum of the horizontal padding and border widths for <right> (in left-to-right text, <left> in right-to-left text), such that four 'auto' values result in the clipping region being the same as the element's border box).
When coordinates are rounded to pixel coordinates, care should be taken that no pixels remain visible when <left> and <right> have the same value (or <top> and <bottom> have the same value), and conversely that no pixels within the element's border box remain hidden when these values are 'auto'.
An element's clipping region clips out any aspect of the element (e.g. content, children, background, borders, text decoration, outline and visible scrolling mechanism — if any) that is outside the clipping region.
The element's ancestors may also clip portions of their content (e.g. via their own 'clip' property and/or if their 'overflow' property is not 'visible'); what is rendered is the cumulative intersection.
If the clipping region exceeds the bounds of the UA's document window, content may be clipped to that window by the native operating environment.
The following two rules:
p { clip: rect(5px, 40px, 45px, 5px); }
p { clip: rect(5px, 55px, 45px, 5px); }
will create the rectangular clipping regions delimited by the dashed lines in the following illustrations:
Note. In CSS 2.1, all clipping regions are rectangular. We anticipate future extensions to permit non-rectangular clipping. Future versions may also reintroduce a syntax for offsetting shapes from each edge instead of offsetting from a point.
Value: | visible | hidden | collapse | inherit |
Initial: | visible |
Applies to: | all elements |
Inherited: | yes |
Percentages: | N/A |
Media: | visual |
Computed value: | as specified |
The 'visibility' property specifies whether the boxes generated by an element are rendered. Invisible boxes still affect layout (set the 'display' property to 'none' to suppress box generation altogether). Values have the following meanings:
This property may be used in conjunction with scripts to create dynamic effects.
In the following example, pressing either form button invokes a user-defined script function that causes the corresponding box to become visible and the other to be hidden. Since these boxes have the same size and position, the effect is that one replaces the other. (The script code is in a hypothetical script language. It may or may not have any effect in a CSS-capable UA.)
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/1999/REC-html401-19991224/strict.dtd">
<HTML>
<HEAD><TITLE>Dynamic visibility example</TITLE>
<META
http-equiv="Content-Script-Type"
content="application/x-hypothetical-scripting-language">
<STYLE type="text/css">
<!--
#container1 { position: absolute;
top: 2in; left: 2in; width: 2in }
#container2 { position: absolute;
top: 2in; left: 2in; width: 2in;
visibility: hidden; }
-->
</STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY>
<P>Choose a suspect:</P>
<DIV id="container1">
<IMG alt="Al Capone"
width="100" height="100"
src="suspect1.png">
<P>Name: Al Capone</P>
<P>Residence: Chicago</P>
</DIV>
<DIV id="container2">
<IMG alt="Lucky Luciano"
width="100" height="100"
src="suspect2.png">
<P>Name: Lucky Luciano</P>
<P>Residence: New York</P>
</DIV>
<FORM method="post"
action="http://www.suspect.org/process-bums">
<P>
<INPUT name="Capone" type="button"
value="Capone"
onclick='show("container1");hide("container2")'>
<INPUT name="Luciano" type="button"
value="Luciano"
onclick='show("container2");hide("container1")'>
</FORM>
</BODY>
</HTML>