font-family
Quick Summary for font-family
font-family
CSS property specifies a prioritized list of one or more font family names and/or generic family names for the selected element.
Code Usage for font-family
/* A font family name and a generic family name */ font-family: "Gill Sans Extrabold", sans-serif; font-family: "Goudy Bookletter 1911", sans-serif; /* A generic family name only */ font-family: serif; font-family: sans-serif; font-family: monospace; font-family: cursive; font-family: fantasy; font-family: system-ui; font-family: ui-serif; font-family: ui-sans-serif; font-family: ui-monospace; font-family: ui-rounded; font-family: emoji; font-family: math; font-family: fangsong; /* Global values */ font-family: inherit; font-family: initial; font-family: revert; font-family: unset;
More Details for font-family
font-family
The font-family
CSS property specifies a prioritized list of one or more font family names and/or generic family names for the selected element.
Values are separated by commas to indicate that they are alternatives. The browser will select the first font in the list that is installed or that can be downloaded using a @font-face
at-rule.
It is often convenient to use the shorthand property font
to set font-size
and other font related properties all at once.
You should always include at least one generic family name in a font-family
list, since there's no guarantee that any given font is available. This lets the browser select an acceptable fallback font when necessary.
The font-family
property specifies a list of fonts, from highest priority to lowest. Font selection does not stop at the first font in the list that is on the user's system. Rather, font selection is done one character at a time, so that if an available font does not have a glyph for a needed character, the latter fonts are tried. When a font is only available in some styles, variants, or sizes, those properties may also influence which font family is chosen.
Syntax
/* A font family name and a generic family name */ font-family: "Gill Sans Extrabold", sans-serif; font-family: "Goudy Bookletter 1911", sans-serif; /* A generic family name only */ font-family: serif; font-family: sans-serif; font-family: monospace; font-family: cursive; font-family: fantasy; font-family: system-ui; font-family: ui-serif; font-family: ui-sans-serif; font-family: ui-monospace; font-family: ui-rounded; font-family: emoji; font-family: math; font-family: fangsong; /* Global values */ font-family: inherit; font-family: initial; font-family: revert; font-family: unset;
The font-family
property lists one or more font families, separated by commas. Each font family is specified as either a <family-name>
or a <generic-name>
value.
The example below lists two font families, the first with a <family-name>
and the second with a <generic-name>
:
font-family: "Gill Sans Extrabold", sans-serif;
Values
<family-name>
The name of a font family. For example, "Times" and "Helvetica" are font families. Font family names containing whitespace should be quoted. For example: "Comic Sans MS".
<generic-name>
Generic font families are a fallback mechanism, a means of preserving some of the style sheet author's intent when none of the specified fonts are available. Generic family names are keywords and must not be quoted. A generic font family should be the last item in the list of font family names. The following keywords are defined:
serif
Glyphs have finishing strokes, flared or tapering ends, or have actual serifed endings.
For example: Lucida Bright, Lucida Fax, Palatino, Palatino Linotype, Palladio, URW Palladio, serif.
sans-serif
Glyphs have stroke endings that are plain.
For example: Open Sans, Fira Sans, Lucida Sans, Lucida Sans Unicode, Trebuchet MS, Liberation Sans, Nimbus Sans L, sans-serif.
monospace
All glyphs have the same fixed width.
For example: Fira Mono, DejaVu Sans Mono, Menlo, Consolas, Liberation Mono, Monaco, Lucida Console, monospace.
cursive
Glyphs in cursive fonts generally have either joining strokes or other cursive characteristics beyond those of italic typefaces. The glyphs are partially or completely connected, and the result looks more like handwritten pen or brush writing than printed letterwork.
For example: Brush Script MT, Brush Script Std, Lucida Calligraphy, Lucida Handwriting, Apple Chancery, cursive.
fantasy
Fantasy fonts are primarily decorative fonts that contain playful representations of characters.
For example: Papyrus, Herculanum, Party LET, Curlz MT, Harrington, fantasy.
system-ui
Glyphs are taken from the default user interface font on a given platform. Because typographic traditions vary widely across the world, this generic is provided for typefaces that don't map cleanly into the other generics.
ui-serif
The default user interface serif font.
ui-sans-serif
The default user interface sans-serif font.
ui-monospace
The default user interface monospace font.
ui-rounded
The default user interface font that has rounded features.
math
This is for the particular stylistic concerns of representing mathematics: superscript and subscript, brackets that cross several lines, nesting expressions, and double struck glyphs with distinct meanings.
emoji
Fonts that are specifically designed to render emoji.
fangsong
A particular style of Chinese characters that are between serif-style Song and cursive-style Kai forms. This style is often used for government documents.
Valid family names
Font family names must either be given quoted as strings, or unquoted as a sequence of one or more identifiers. This means that punctuation characters and digits at the start of each token must be escaped in unquoted font family names.
It is a good practice to quote font family names that contain white space, digits, or punctuation characters other than hyphens.
For example, the following declarations are valid:
font-family: "Goudy Bookletter 1911", sans-serif;
The following declarations are invalid:
font-family: Goudy Bookletter 1911, sans-serif; font-family: Red/Black, sans-serif; font-family: "Lucida" Grande, sans-serif; font-family: Ahem!, sans-serif; font-family: test@foo, sans-serif; font-family: #POUND, sans-serif; font-family: Hawaii 5-0, sans-serif;
The following example is technically valid but is not recommended:
font-family: Gill Sans Extrabold, sans-serif;
Formal definition
Initial value | depends on user agent |
---|---|
Applies to | all elements. It also applies to ::first-letter and ::first-line . |
Inherited | yes |
Computed value | as specified |
Animation type | discrete |
Formal syntax
[ <family-name> | <generic-family> ]#where
<family-name> = <string> | <custom-ident>+<generic-family> = serif | sans-serif | cursive | fantasy | monospace
Examples
Some common font families
.serif { font-family: Times, "Times New Roman", Georgia, serif; } .sansserif { font-family: Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; } .monospace { font-family: "Lucida Console", Courier, monospace; } .cursive { font-family: cursive; } .fantasy { font-family: fantasy; } .emoji { font-family: emoji; } .math { font-family: math; } .fangsong { font-family: fangsong; }
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Fonts Module Level 4 # generic-font-families |
CSS Fonts Module Level 4 # font-family-prop |
See also
font-style
font-weight
Fundamental text and font styling Last modified: Aug 12, 2021, by MDN contributors
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