Logical properties for margins, borders, and padding - CSS: Cascading Style Sheets | MDN (original) (raw)

The CSS logical properties and values module defines flow-relative mappings for the various margin, border, and padding properties and their shorthands. In this guide, we take a look at these.

If you look at the logical properties and values module, you may notice the list of module properties is very long. This is mostly because there are four longhand values each for margin, border, and padding side, plus all the shorthand values.

Mappings for margins, borders, and padding

Margin examples

The mapped margin properties of margin-inline-start, margin-inline-end, margin-block-start, and margin-inline-end can be used instead of their physical counterparts.

This example has two boxes with different sized margins to each edge. An extra container with a border has been included to make the margin more apparent.

One box uses physical properties and the other logical properties. Try changing the direction property to rtl to cause the boxes to display in a right-to-left direction; the margins on the first box will stay in the same place, while the margins on the inline dimension of the second box will switch.

Also try changing the writing-mode from horizontal-tb to vertical-rl. Notice how the margins stay in the same place for the first box, but switch around to follow the text direction in the second.

Margin shorthands

There are shorthands available to target either both the inline sides or both the block sides, margin-inline and margin-block respectively. Each accepts two values. The first value will apply to the start of that dimension, the second to the end. If only one value is set, it is applied to both.

In a horizontal writing mode this CSS would apply a 5px margin to the top of the box and a 10px margin to the bottom.

.box {
  margin-block: 5px 10px;
}

Padding examples

The mapped padding properties of padding-inline-start, padding-inline-end, padding-block-start, and padding-inline-end can be used instead of their physical counterparts.

In this example, there are two boxes. One has physical padding properties set and the other uses logical padding properties. With a writing-mode of horizontal-tb, both boxes should appear the same.

Try changing the direction property to rtl to cause the boxes to display in a right-to-left direction. The padding on the first box will stay in the same place, whereas the padding on the inline dimension of the second box will switch.

You can also try changing the writing-mode from horizontal-tb to vertical-rl. Again, notice how the padding stays in the same place for the first box, but switches around to follow the text direction in the second.

Padding shorthands

As with margin, there are two-value shorthands for padding — padding-inline and padding-block — which allow you to set the padding of the two inline, and two block dimensions, respectively.

In a horizontal writing-mode, this CSS would apply 5px of padding to the top of the box and 10px of padding to the bottom:

.box {
  padding-block: 5px 10px;
}

Border examples

The border properties are the main reason that this module seems to have so many properties, as it provides longhand logical properties for the color, width, and style of the border on each side of a box, along with the shorthand to set all three at once for each side. As with margin and padding, there is a mapped version of each physical property.

The demo below uses some longhands and three shorthand values. As with the other demos, try changing the direction property to rtl to cause the boxes to display in a right-to-left direction, or changing the writing-mode from horizontal-tb to vertical-rl.

Border shorthands

There are two-value shorthands to set the width, style, and color of the block or inline dimension, and shorthands to set all three values in the block or inline dimension. The below code, in a horizontal writing mode, would give you a 2px green solid border on the top and bottom of the box, and a 4px dotted purple border on the left and right.

.box {
  border-block: 2px solid green;
  border-inline-width: 4px;
  border-inline-style: dotted;
  border-inline-color: rebeccapurple;
}

Flow relative border-radius properties

The module has flow-relative equivalents for the border-radius longhands. The below example, in a horizontal writing-mode, would set the top-right border radius to 1em, the bottom-right to 0, the bottom-left to 20px and the top-left to 40px.

.box {
  border-end-start-radius: 1em;
  border-end-end-radius: 0;
  border-start-end-radius: 20px;
  border-start-start-radius: 40px;
}

Indicating logical values for the 4-value shorthand syntax

The specification makes a suggestion for the four-value shorthands such as the margin property, however the final decision on how this should be indicated is as yet unresolved, and is discussed in this issue.

Using any four-value shorthand such as margin, padding, or border will currently use the physical versions, so if following the flow of the document is important, use the longhand properties for the time being.