css properties border-style

The border-style shorthand CSS property sets the line style for all four sides of an element's border.

Constituent properties

This property is a shorthand for the following CSS properties:

Syntax

/* Keyword values */
border-style: none;
border-style: hidden;
border-style: dotted;
border-style: dashed;
border-style: solid;
border-style: double;
border-style: groove;
border-style: ridge;
border-style: inset;
border-style: outset;

/* top and bottom | left and right */
border-style: dotted solid;

/* top | left and right | bottom */
border-style: hidden double dashed;

/* top | right | bottom | left */
border-style: none solid dotted dashed;

/* Global values */
border-style: inherit;
border-style: initial;
border-style: revert;
border-style: revert-layer;
border-style: unset;

The border-style property may be specified using one, two, three, or four values.

Each value is a keyword chosen from the list below.

Values

<line-style>

Describes the style of the border. It can have the following values:

none

Like the hidden keyword, displays no border. Unless a background-image is set, the computed value of the same side's border-width will be 0, even if the specified value is something else. In the case of table cell and border collapsing, the none value has the lowest priority: if any other conflicting border is set, it will be displayed.

hidden

Like the none keyword, displays no border. Unless a background-image is set, the computed value of the same side's border-width will be 0, even if the specified value is something else. In the case of table cell and border collapsing, the hidden value has the highest priority: if any other conflicting border is set, it won't be displayed.

dotted

Displays a series of rounded dots. The spacing of the dots is not defined by the specification and is implementation-specific. The radius of the dots is half the computed value of the same side's border-width.

dashed

Displays a series of short square-ended dashes or line segments. The exact size and length of the segments are not defined by the specification and are implementation-specific.

solid

Displays a single, straight, solid line.

double

Displays two straight lines that add up to the pixel size defined by border-width.

groove

Displays a border with a carved appearance. It is the opposite of ridge.

ridge

Displays a border with an extruded appearance. It is the opposite of groove.

inset

Displays a border that makes the element appear embedded. It is the opposite of outset. When applied to a table cell with border-collapse set to collapsed, this value behaves like ridge.

outset

Displays a border that makes the element appear embossed. It is the opposite of inset. When applied to a table cell with border-collapse set to collapsed, this value behaves like groove.

Examples

All property values

Here is an example of all the property values.

HTML

<pre class="b1">none</pre>
<pre class="b2">hidden</pre>
<pre class="b3">dotted</pre>
<pre class="b4">dashed</pre>
<pre class="b5">solid</pre>
<pre class="b6">double</pre>
<pre class="b7">groove</pre>
<pre class="b8">ridge</pre>
<pre class="b9">inset</pre>
<pre class="b10">outset</pre>

CSS

pre {
  height: 80px;
  width: 120px;
  margin: 20px;
  padding: 20px;
  display: inline-block;
  background-color: palegreen;
  border-width: 5px;
  box-sizing: border-box;
}

/* border-style example classes */
.b1 {
  border-style: none;
}

.b2 {
  border-style: hidden;
}

.b3 {
  border-style: dotted;
}

.b4 {
  border-style: dashed;
}

.b5 {
  border-style: solid;
}

.b6 {
  border-style: double;
}

.b7 {
  border-style: groove;
}

.b8 {
  border-style: ridge;
}

.b9 {
  border-style: inset;
}

.b10 {
  border-style: outset;
}

See also