The scaleX()
CSS function defines a transformation that resizes an element along the
x-axis (horizontally). Its result is a <transform-function>()
data type.
It modifies the abscissa of each element point by a constant factor, except when the scale factor is 1, in which case
the function is the identity transform. The scaling is not isotropic, and the angles of the element are generally not conserved, except for multiples of 90 degrees.
scaleX(-1)
defines an axial symmetry, with a vertical axis passing through the origin (as specified by the transform-origin()
property).
Note: scaleX(sx)
is equivalent to
scale(sx, 1)
or
scale3d(sx, 1, 1)
.
Syntax
scaleX(s)
Values
s
-
Is a
<number>()
representing the scaling factor to apply on the abscissa of each point of the element.
Cartesian coordinates on ℝ^2 | Homogeneous coordinates on ℝℙ^2 | Cartesian coordinates on ℝ^3 | Homogeneous coordinates on ℝℙ^3 |
---|---|---|---|
[s 0 0 1 0 0] |
Examples
HTML
<div>Normal</div> <div class="scaled">Scaled</div>
CSS
div { width: 80px; height: 80px; background-color: skyblue; } .scaled { transform: scaleX(0.6); background-color: pink; }
See also
scaleY()
scaleZ()
transform()
scale()
<transform-function>()
transform-origin()
- Other individual transform properties:
translate()
rotate()
- Note: there is no
skew
property