<display-outside>
Quick Summary for <display-outside>
<display-outside>
keywords specify the element's outer display
type, which is essentially its role in flow layout. These keywords are used as values of the display
property, and can be used for legacy purposes as a single keyword, or as defined in the Level 3 specification alongside a value from the <display-inside>
keywords.
Code Usage for <display-outside>
<span>span 1</span> <span>span 2</span>
More Details for <display-outside>
<display-outside>
The <display-outside>
keywords specify the element's outer display
type, which is essentially its role in flow layout. These keywords are used as values of the display
property, and can be used for legacy purposes as a single keyword, or as defined in the Level 3 specification alongside a value from the <display-inside>
keywords.
Syntax
Valid <display-outside>
values:
block
The element generates a block element box, generating line breaks both before and after the element when in the normal flow.
inline
The element generates one or more inline element boxes that do not generate line breaks before or after themselves. In normal flow, the next element will be on the same line if there is space
Note: Browsers that support the two value syntax, on finding the outer value only, such as when display: block
or display: inline
is specified, will set the inner value to flow
. This will result in expected behavior; for example if you specify an element to be block, you would expect that the children of that element would participate in block and inline normal flow layout.
Examples
In the following example, span elements (normally displayed as inline elements) are set to display: block
and so break onto new lines and expand to fill their container in the inline dimension.
HTML
<span>span 1</span> <span>span 2</span>
CSS
span { display: block; border: 1px solid rebeccapurple; }
Result
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Display Module Level 3 # typedef-display-outside |
See also
display
<display-inside>
<display-listitem>
<display-internal>
<display-box>
<display-legacy>
Block and Inline layout in Normal Flow Formatting Contexts explained Last modified: Feb 22, 2022, by MDN contributors
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