The <overflow>
enumerated value type represents the keyword values for the <overflow-block>
, <overflow-inline>
, <overflow-x>
, and <overflow-y>
longhand properties and the <overflow>
shorthand property. These properties apply to block containers, flex containers, and grid containers.
Syntax
<overflow> = visible | hidden | clip | scroll | auto
Values
The <overflow>
enumerated value type is specified using one of the values listed below.
visible
-
Overflow content is not clipped and may be visible outside the element's padding box. The element box is not a scroll container. This is the default value for all the properties that have the
<overflow>
enumerated value type. hidden
-
Overflow content is clipped at the element's padding box. There are no scroll bars, and the clipped content is not visible (i.e., clipped content is hidden), but the content still exists. User agents do not add scrollbars and also do not allow users to view the content outside the clipped region by actions such as dragging on a touch screen or using the scroll wheel on a mouse. The content can be scrolled programmatically (for example, by setting the value of the
scrollLeft
property or thescrollTo()
method). The content can also be scrolled via keyboard interaction; arrows enable scrolling through the content and tabbing to a focusable element within the hidden content enables scrolling the focused element into view. The element box on which this value is set is a scroll container. clip
-
Overflow content is clipped at the element's overflow clip edge that is defined using the
overflow-clip-margin
property. As a result, content overflows the element's padding box by the<length>
value ofoverflow-clip-margin
or by0px
if not set. Overflow content outside the clipped region is not visible, user agents do not add a scrollbar, and programmatic scrolling is also not supported. No new formatting context is created. scroll
-
Overflow content is clipped at the element's padding box, and overflow content can be scrolled into view using scrollbars. User agents display scrollbars in both horizontal and vertical directions if only one value is set, whether or not any content is overflowing or clipped. The use of this keyword value, therefore, can prevent scrollbars from appearing and disappearing as content changes. Printers may still print overflowing content. The element box on which this value is set is a scroll container.
auto
-
Overflow content is clipped at the element's padding box, and overflow content can be scrolled into view. Unlike
scroll
, user agents display scrollbars only if the content is overflowing and hide scrollbars by default. If content fits inside the element's padding box, it looks the same as withvisible
but still establishes a new formatting context. The element box on which this value is set is a scroll container.
Note: The keyword value overlay
is a legacy value alias for auto
. With overlay
, the scroll bars are drawn on top of the content instead of taking up space.
Examples
This example demos all the <overflow>
enumerated values for the <overflow>
property.
HTML
The HTML in this example contains some lyrics within the <pre>
element. The HTML also contains a link text to enable testing the effects of keyboard focus on overflow and scroll behaviors. The same HTML code is repeated multiple times to show the effect of each <overflow>
enumerated value.
<pre> Oh, Rubber Duckie, you're the one You make bath time lots of fun Rubber Duckie, I'm awfully fond of you Rubber Duckie, joy of joys When I squeeze you, you make noise Rubber Duckie, you're my very best friend, it's true Oh, every day when I make my way to the tubby I find a little fella who's cute and yellow and chubby Rub-a-dub-dubby <a href="#">Rubber Duckie</a>, you're so fine And I'm lucky that you're mine Rubber Duckie, I'm awfully fond of you </pre>
CSS
For the purpose of demonstration, the size of the <pre>
element box has been defined to ensure that the content overflows its container in both the inline and block directions. A different <overflow>
value is set for each of the repeating <pre>
elements. For the clip
value demonstration, a <overflow-clip-margin>
has been added.
pre { block-size: 100px; inline-size: 295px; } pre:nth-of-type(1) { overflow: hidden; } pre:nth-of-type(1)::before { content: "hidden: "; } pre:nth-of-type(2) { overflow: clip; overflow-clip-margin: 1em; } pre:nth-of-type(2)::before { content: "clip: "; } pre:nth-of-type(3) { overflow: scroll; } pre:nth-of-type(3)::before { content: "scroll: "; } pre:nth-of-type(4) { overflow: auto; } pre:nth-of-type(4)::before { content: "auto: "; } pre:nth-of-type(5) { overflow: clip; overflow: overlay; overflow-clip-margin: 3em; } pre:nth-of-type(5)::before { content: "overlay (or clip if not supported): "; } pre:nth-of-type(6) { overflow: visible; } pre:nth-of-type(6)::before { content: "visible: "; }
Result
To see the effect of keyboard focus on overflow and scroll behaviors, try tabbing through all the links in the example. Notice that the clip
box does not create a scroll container, and the link does not come into view when the link is focused. The visible
value, which has the link always in view, is also not a scroll container.
See also
- Properties that use this data type:
<overflow-x>
,<overflow-y>
,<overflow-inline>
,<overflow-block>
and<overflow>
- CSS overflow module