text-wrap

The text-wrap CSS shorthand property controls how text inside an element is wrapped. The different values provide:

  • Typographic improvements, for example more balanced line lengths across broken headings
  • A way to turn text wrapping off completely.

Note: The white-space-collapse and text-wrap properties can be declared together using the white-space shorthand property.

Try it

Constituent properties

This property is a shorthand for the following CSS properties:

Syntax

css
/* Keyword values */
text-wrap: wrap;
text-wrap: nowrap;
text-wrap: balance;
text-wrap: pretty;
text-wrap: stable;

/* Global values */
text-wrap: inherit;
text-wrap: initial;
text-wrap: revert;
text-wrap: revert-layer;
text-wrap: unset;

The text-wrap property is specified as a single keyword chosen from the list of values below.

Values

wrap

Text is wrapped across lines at appropriate characters (for example spaces, in languages like English that use space separators) to minimize overflow. This is the default value.

nowrap

Text does not wrap across lines. It will overflow its containing element rather than breaking onto a new line.

balance

Text is wrapped in a way that best balances the number of characters on each line, enhancing layout quality and legibility. Because counting characters and balancing them across multiple lines is computationally expensive, this value is only supported for blocks of text spanning a limited number of lines (six or less for Chromium and ten or less for Firefox).

pretty

Results in the same behavior as wrap, except that the user agent will use a slower algorithm that favors better layout over speed. This is intended for body copy where good typography is favored over performance (for example, when the number of orphans should be kept to a minimum).

stable

Results in the same behavior as wrap, except that when the user is editing the content, the lines that come before the lines they are editing remain static rather than the whole block of text re-wrapping.

Description

There are 2 ways that text can flow across lines within a block of content, such as a paragraph (<p>) or headings (<h1>–<h6>). These are forced line breaks, that are controlled by the user, and soft line breaks, that are controlled by the browser. The text-wrap property can be used to prompt the browser how to control the soft line breaks.

The value you choose, for text-wrap, depends on how many lines of text you anticipate styling, whether the text is contenteditable, and whether you need to prioritize appearance or performance.

When the styled content will be limited to a short number of lines, such as headings, captions, and blockquotes, text-wrap: balance can be added to balance the number of characters on each line, enhancing layout quality and legibility. As browsers limit the number of lines impacted by this property, this value's impact on performance is negligible.

For longer sections of text, text-wrap: pretty can be used. Note that pretty has a negative effect on performance, so it should be only used for longer blocks of text when the layout is more important than speed.

The stable value improves user experience when used on content that is contenteditable. This value ensures that, as the user is editing text, the previous lines in the area being edited remain stable.

Formal definition

Initial valuewrap
Applies totext and block containers
Inheritedyes
Computed valueas specified
Animation typediscrete

Formal syntax

text-wrap = 
<'text-wrap-mode'> ||
<'text-wrap-style'>

Examples

Basic text wrap value comparison

HTML

html
<h2 class="wrap" contenteditable="true">
  The default behavior; the text in the heading wraps "normally"
</h2>

<h2 class="nowrap" contenteditable="true">
  In this case the text in the heading doesn't wrap, and overflows the container
</h2>

<h2 class="balance" contenteditable="true">
  In this case the text in the heading is nicely balanced across lines
</h2>

CSS

css
.wrap {
  text-wrap: wrap;
}

.nowrap {
  text-wrap: nowrap;
}

.balance {
  text-wrap: balance;
}

h2 {
  font-size: 2rem;
  font-family: sans-serif;
}

Result

The text in the example is editable. Change the text, adding long words, to view how the different line and word lengths impact wrapping.

Specifications

Specification
CSS Text Module Level 4
# text-wrap

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also