CSS3 Overflow-wrap
- CRAllows lines to be broken within words if an otherwise unbreakable string is too long to fit. Currently mostly supported using the word-wrap
property.
Chrome
- ◐ 4 - 22: Partial support
- ✅ 23 - 130: Supported
- ✅ 131: Supported
- ✅ 132 - 134: Supported
Edge
- ◐ 12 - 17: Partial support
- ✅ 18 - 130: Supported
- ✅ 131: Supported
Safari
- ◐ 3.1 - 6: Partial support
- ✅ 6.1 - 18.0: Supported
- ✅ 18.1: Supported
- ✅ 18.2 - TP: Supported
Firefox
- ❌ 2 - 3: Not supported
- ◐ 3.5 - 48: Partial support
- ✅ 49 - 131: Supported
- ✅ 132: Supported
- ✅ 133 - 135: Supported
Opera
- ❌ 9 - 10.1: Not supported
- ◐ 10.5 - 12: Partial support
- ✅ 12.1 - 113: Supported
- ✅ 114: Supported
IE
- ◐ 5.5 - 10: Partial support
- ◐ 11: Partial support
Chrome for Android
- ✅ 131: Supported
Safari on iOS
- ◐ 3.2 - 6.1: Partial support
- ✅ 7 - 18.0: Supported
- ✅ 18.1: Supported
- ✅ 18.2: Supported
Samsung Internet
- ✅ 4 - 25: Supported
- ✅ 26: Supported
Opera Mini
- ◐ all: Partial support
Opera Mobile
- ◐ 10 - 12.1: Partial support
- ✅ 80: Supported
UC Browser for Android
- ✅ 15.5: Supported
Android Browser
- ◐ 2.1 - 4.3: Partial support
- ✅ 4.4 - 4.4.4: Supported
- ✅ 131: Supported
Firefox for Android
- ✅ 132: Supported
QQ Browser
- ✅ 14.9: Supported
Baidu Browser
- ✅ 13.52: Supported
KaiOS Browser
- ◐ 2.5: Partial support
- ✅ 3: Supported
Partial support refers to requiring the legacy name "word-wrap" (rather than "overflow-wrap") to work.