<image>
Code Usage for image()
url(test.jpg) /* A <url>, as long as test.jpg is an actual image */ linear-gradient(blue, red) /* A <gradient> */ element(#realid) /* A part of the webpage, referenced with the element() function, if "realid" is an existing ID on the page */ image(ltr 'arrow.png#xywh=0,0,16,16', red) /* A section 16x16 section of <url>, starting from the top, left of the original image as long as arrow.png is a supported image, otherwise a solid red swatch. If language is rtl, the image will be horizontally flipped. */ cross-fade(20% url(twenty.png), url(eighty.png)) /* cross faded images, with twenty being 20% opaque and eighty being 80% opaque. */ image-set('test.jpg' 1x, 'test-2x.jpg' 2x) /* a selection of images with varying resolutions */
More Details for image()
<image>
The <image>
CSS data type represents a two-dimensional image.
Syntax
The <image>
data type can be represented with any of the following:
url()
data type A <gradient>
data type A part of the webpage, defined by the element()
function An image, image fragment or solid patch of color, defined by the image()
function A blending of two or more images defined by the cross-fade()
function. A selection of images chosen based on resolution defined by the image-set()
function. Description
CSS can handle the following kinds of images:
Images with intrinsic dimensions (a natural size), like a JPEG, PNG, or other raster format. Images with multiple intrinsic dimensions, existing in multiple versions inside a single file, like some .ico formats. (In this case, the intrinsic dimensions will be those of the image largest in area and the aspect ratio most similar to the containing box.) Images with no intrinsic dimensions but with an intrinsic aspect ratio between its width and height, like an SVG or other vector format. Images with neither intrinsic dimensions, nor an intrinsic aspect ratio, like a CSS gradient.CSS determines an object's concrete size using (1) its intrinsic dimensions; (2) its specified size, defined by CSS properties like width
, height
, or background-size
; and (3) its default size, determined by the kind of property the image is used with:
Kind of Object (CSS Property) | Default object size |
---|---|
background-image | The size of the element's background positioning area |
list-style-image | The size of a 1em character |
border-image-source | The size of the element's border image area |
cursor | The browser-defined size matching the usual cursor size on the client's system |
mask-image | ? |
shape-outside | ? |
mask-border-source | ? |
symbols() for @counter-style | At risk feature. If supported, the browser-defined size matching the usual cursor size on the client's system |
content for a pseudo-element (::after /::before ) | A 300px × 150px rectangle |
The concrete object size is calculated using the following algorithm:
If the specified size defines both the width and the height, these values are used as the concrete object size. If the specified size defines only the width or only the height, the missing value is determined using the intrinsic ratio, if there is any, the intrinsic dimensions if the specified value matches, or the default object size for that missing value. If the specified size defines neither the width nor the height, the concrete object size is calculated so that it matches the intrinsic aspect ratio of the image but without exceeding the default object size in any dimension. If the image has no intrinsic aspect ratio, the intrinsic aspect ratio of the object it applies to is used; if this object has none, the missing width or height are taken from the default object size.Note: Not all browsers support every type of image on every property. See the browser compatibility section for details.
Accessibility concerns
Browsers do not provide any special information on background images to assistive technology. This is important primarily for screen readers, as a screen reader will not announce its presence and therefore convey nothing to its users. If the image contains information critical to understanding the page's overall purpose, it is better to describe it semantically in the document.
MDN Understanding WCAG, Guideline 1.1 explanations Understanding Success Criterion 1.1.1 | W3C Understanding WCAG 2.0Examples
Valid images
url(test.jpg) /* A <url>, as long as test.jpg is an actual image */ linear-gradient(blue, red) /* A <gradient> */ element(#realid) /* A part of the webpage, referenced with the element() function, if "realid" is an existing ID on the page */ image(ltr 'arrow.png#xywh=0,0,16,16', red) /* A section 16x16 section of <url>, starting from the top, left of the original image as long as arrow.png is a supported image, otherwise a solid red swatch. If language is rtl, the image will be horizontally flipped. */ cross-fade(20% url(twenty.png), url(eighty.png)) /* cross faded images, with twenty being 20% opaque and eighty being 80% opaque. */ image-set('test.jpg' 1x, 'test-2x.jpg' 2x) /* a selection of images with varying resolutions */
Invalid images
nourl.jpg /* An image file must be defined using the url() function. */ url(report.pdf) /* A file pointed to by the url() function must be an image. */ element(#fakeid) /* An element ID must be an existing ID on the page. */ image(z.jpg#xy=0,0) /* The spatial fragment must be written in the format of xywh=#,#,#,# */ image-set('cat.jpg' 1x, 'dog.jpg' 1x) /* every image in an image set must have a different resolutions */
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Images Module Level 3 # image-values |
See also
<gradient>
element()
image()
image-set()
cross-fade()
Last modified: Aug 12, 2021, by MDN contributors
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