The offset-anchor
CSS property specifies the point inside the box of an element traveling along an offset-path
that is actually moving along the path.
Syntax
/* Keyword values */ offset-anchor: top; offset-anchor: bottom; offset-anchor: left; offset-anchor: right; offset-anchor: center; offset-anchor: auto; /* <percentage> values */ offset-anchor: 25% 75%; /* <length> values */ offset-anchor: 0 0; offset-anchor: 1cm 2cm; offset-anchor: 10ch 8em; /* Edge offsets values */ offset-anchor: bottom 10px right 20px; offset-anchor: right 3em bottom 10px; /* Global values */ offset-anchor: inherit; offset-anchor: initial; offset-anchor: revert; offset-anchor: revert-layer; offset-anchor: unset;
Values
auto
-
offset-anchor
is given the same value as the element'stransform-origin
, unlessoffset-path
isnone
, in which case it takes its value fromoffset-position
. <position>
-
A
<position>
defines an x/y coordinate, to place an item relative to the edges of an element's box. It can be defined using one to four values. For more specifics, see the<position>
andbackground-position
reference pages. Note that the 3-value position syntax does not work for any usage of<position>
, except for inbackground(-position)
.
Formal definition
Initial value | auto |
---|---|
Applies to | transformable elements |
Inherited | no |
Computed value | the auto keyword or a computed <position> |
Animation type | by computed value |
Formal syntax
auto | <position>
Examples
Setting various offset-anchor values
In the following example, we have three <div>
elements nested in <section>
elements. Each <div>
is given the same offset-path
(a horizontal line 200 pixels long) and animated to move along it. The three are then given different background-color
and offset-anchor
values.
Each <section>
has been styled with a linear gradient to give it a horizontal line running through its center, to give you a visual display of where the <div>
's offset paths are running.
This allows you to see what effect the different offset-anchor
values have — the first one, auto
, causes the <div>
's center point to move along the path. The other two cause the <div>
's top-right and bottom-left points to move along the path, respectively.
HTML
<section> <div class="offset-anchor1"></div> </section> <section> <div class="offset-anchor2"></div> </section> <section> <div class="offset-anchor3"></div> </section>
CSS
div { offset-path: path("M 0,20 L 200,20"); animation: move 3000ms infinite alternate ease-in-out; width: 40px; height: 40px; } section { background-image: linear-gradient( to bottom, transparent, transparent 49%, #000 50%, #000 51%, transparent 52% ); border: 1px solid #ccc; margin-bottom: 10px; } .offset-anchor1 { offset-anchor: auto; background: cyan; } .offset-anchor2 { offset-anchor: right top; background: purple; } .offset-anchor3 { offset-anchor: left bottom; background: magenta; } @keyframes move { 0% { offset-distance: 0%; } 100% { offset-distance: 100%; } }