Sat, 28 Feb 2015 01:53:36 +0900
[css-overflow] Detail how the computed value of 'continue' works
In the process of doing that, I also realised that ''next'' and ''auto''
were identical, so I merged them.
1 <h1>CSS Overflow Module Level 3</h1>
2 <pre class="metadata">
3 Status: ED
4 ED: http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-overflow/
5 Shortname: css-overflow
6 Group: csswg
7 Level: 1
8 TR: http://www.w3.org/TR/css-overflow-3/
9 Previous version: http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-css-overflow-3-20130418/
10 Editor: L. David Baron, Mozilla, http://dbaron.org/
11 Editor: Florian Rivoal, Invited Expert, [email protected]
12 Abstract: This module contains the features of CSS relating to new mechanisms of overflow handling in visual media (e.g., screen or paper). In interactive media, it describes features that allow the overflow from a fixed size container to be handled by pagination (displaying one page at a time). It also describes features, applying to all visual media, that allow the contents of an element to be spread across multiple fragments, allowing the contents to flow across multiple regions or to have different styles for different fragments.
13 Status Text: The following features are at risk: …
14 !Change Log: <a href="https://hg.csswg.org/drafts/log/tip/css-overflow/Overview.bs">from 27 January 2015 to the present</a>
15 !Change Log: <a href="https://hg.csswg.org/drafts/log/tip/css-overflow/Overview.src.html">from 28 March 2013 to 27 January 2015</a>
16 !Change Log: <a href="https://hg.csswg.org/drafts/log/tip/css3-overflow/Overview.src.html">from 31 July 2012 to 27 March 2013</a>
17 </pre>
18 <!-- FIXME: Regressions from bikeshed conversion: -->
19 <!-- - Value lines in propdef tables no longer link to #values. -->
20 <!-- - no longer says "Test suite: none yet" -->
21 <!-- - Abstract has the most introductory sentence last -->
22 <!-- FIXME: other bikeshed issues -->
23 <!-- <integer> in max-lines value line should link to the dfn below, not to css-values -->
24 <pre class="link-defaults">
25 spec:css-transforms-1; type:property; text:transform-style
26 </pre>
27 <!-- FIXME: the break-* link doesn't actually work! -->
28 <pre class="anchors">
29 url: http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/CR-css3-marquee-20081205/#the-overflow-style; type: property; text: overflow-style;
30 url: http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-break/#breaking-controls; type: property; text: break-*;
31 url: http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-multicol/#overflow-columns; type: dfn; text: overflow columns;
32 url: http://dev.w3.org/csswg/selectors-3/#subject; type: dfn; text: subject;
33 </pre>
34 <style>
35 table.source-demo-pair {
36 width: 100%;
37 }
39 .in-cards-demo {
40 width: 13em;
41 height: 8em;
43 padding: 4px;
44 border: medium solid blue;
45 margin: 6px;
47 font: medium/1.3 Times New Roman, Times, serif;
48 white-space: nowrap;
49 }
51 .bouncy-columns-demo {
52 width: 6em;
53 height: 10em;
54 float: left;
55 margin: 1em;
56 font: medium/1.25 Times New Roman, Times, serif;
57 white-space: nowrap;
58 }
59 .bouncy-columns-demo.one {
60 background: aqua; color: black;
61 transform: rotate(-3deg);
62 }
63 .bouncy-columns-demo.two {
64 background: yellow; color: black;
65 transform: rotate(3deg);
66 }
68 .article-font-inherit-demo {
69 font: 1em/1.25 Times New Roman, Times, serif;
70 white-space: nowrap;
71 }
72 .article-font-inherit-demo.one {
73 width: 12em;
74 font-size: 1.5em;
75 margin-bottom: 1em;
76 height: 4em;
77 }
78 .article-font-inherit-demo.two {
79 width: 11em;
80 margin-left: 5em;
81 margin-right: 2em;
82 }
84 .dark-columns-demo {
85 width: 6em;
86 height: 10em;
87 float: left;
88 margin-right: 1em;
89 font: medium/1.25 Times New Roman, Times, serif;
90 white-space: nowrap;
91 }
92 .dark-columns-demo.one {
93 background: aqua; color: black;
94 }
95 .dark-columns-demo.one :link {
96 color: blue;
97 }
98 .dark-columns-demo.one :visited {
99 color: purple;
100 }
101 .dark-columns-demo.two {
102 background: navy; color: white;
103 }
104 .dark-columns-demo.two :link {
105 color: aqua;
106 }
107 .dark-columns-demo.two :visited {
108 color: fuchsia;
109 }
111 .article-max-lines-demo {
112 font: 1em/1.25 Times New Roman, Times, serif;
113 white-space: nowrap;
114 }
115 .article-max-lines-demo.one::first-letter {
116 font-size: 2em;
117 line-height: 0.9;
118 }
119 .article-max-lines-demo.one {
120 font-size: 1.5em;
121 width: 16em;
122 }
123 .article-max-lines-demo.two {
124 width: 11.5em;
125 float: left; margin-right: 1em;
126 }
127 .article-max-lines-demo.three {
128 width: 11.5em;
129 float: left;
130 }
131 </style>
133 <p>
134 </p>
136 <h2 id="intro">
137 Introduction</h2>
139 <p>
140 In CSS Level 1 [[CSS1]], placing more content than would fit
141 inside an element with a specified size
142 was generally an authoring error.
143 Doing so caused the content to extend
144 outside the bounds of the element,
145 which would likely cause
146 that content to overlap with other elements.
147 </p>
149 <p>
150 CSS Level 2 [[CSS21]] introduced the 'overflow' property,
151 which allows authors to have overflow be handled by scrolling,
152 which means it is no longer an authoring error.
153 It also allows authors to specify
154 that overflow is handled by clipping,
155 which makes sense when the author's intent
156 is that the content not be shown.
157 </p>
159 <p>
160 However, scrolling is not the only way
161 to present large amounts of content,
162 and may even not be the optimal way.
163 After all, the codex replaced the scroll
164 as the common format for large written works
165 because of its advantages.
166 </p>
168 <p>
169 This specification introduces
170 a mechanism for Web pages to specify
171 that an element of a page should handle overflow
172 through pagination rather than through scrolling.
173 </p>
175 <p>
176 This specification also extends the concept of overflow
177 in another direction.
178 Instead of requiring that authors specify a single area
179 into which the content of an element must flow,
180 this specification allows authors to specify multiple fragments,
181 each with their own dimensions and styles,
182 so that the content of the element can flow from one to the next,
183 using as many as needed to place the content without overflowing.
184 </p>
186 <p>
187 In both of these cases, implementations must
188 break the content in the block-progression dimension.
189 Implementations must do this is described
190 in the CSS Fragmentation Module [[!CSS3-BREAK]].
191 </p>
193 <h2 id="overflow-concepts">Types of overflow</h2>
195 <p>
196 CSS uses the term <dfn>overflow</dfn> to describe
197 the contents of a box
198 that extend outside that one of that box's edges
199 (i.e., its <i>content edge</i>, <i>padding edge</i>,
200 <i>border edge</i>, or <i>margin edge</i>).
201 The overflow might be described as the elements or features
202 that cause this overflow,
203 the non-rectangular region occupied by these features,
204 or, more commonly,
205 as the minimal rectangle that bounds that region.
206 A box's overflow is computed based on the boxes and styles
207 of the box and of all its descendants whose containing block chain
208 <span class="issue">undefined term?</span>
209 includes the box.
210 </p>
212 <p>
213 In most cases, any of these types of overflow
214 can be computed for any box
215 from the bounds and properties of that box,
216 and from the overflow (of that type)
217 of each of its children.
218 However, this is not always the case; for example,
219 when ''transform-style: preserve-3d'' [[CSS3-TRANSFORMS]] is used on
220 some of the children, their descendants with
221 ''transform-style: preserve-3d'' must also be examined.
222 </p>
224 <h3 id="ink-overflow">Ink overflow</h3>
226 <p>
227 The <dfn id="ink-overflow0">ink overflow</dfn> of a box
228 is the part of that box and its contents that
229 creates a visual effect outside of
230 the box's border box.
231 </p>
233 <p>
234 Since some effects in CSS (for example, the blurs in
235 'text-shadow' [[CSS3TEXT]] and 'box-shadow' [[CSS3BG]])
236 do not define what visual extent they cover, the extent
237 of the <a>ink overflow</a> is undefined.
238 </p>
240 <p class="issue">
241 Should we try to define it at all and just leave pieces undefined?
242 </p>
244 <p>
245 The <dfn>ink overflow region</dfn> is the non-rectangular region
246 occupied by the <a>ink overflow</a>, and the
247 <dfn>ink overflow rectangle</dfn> is
248 the minimal rectangle whose axis is aligned to the box's axes
249 and contains the <a>ink overflow region</a>.
250 Note that the <a>ink overflow rectangle</a> is a rectangle
251 in the box's coordinate system, but might be non-rectangular
252 in other coordinate systems due to transforms [[CSS3-TRANSFORMS]].
253 </p>
255 <h3 id="scrollable-overflow">Scrollable overflow</h3>
257 <p>
258 The <dfn id="scrollable-overflow0">scrollable overflow</dfn> of a box is the
259 set of things extending outside of that box's padding edge
260 for which a scrolling mechanism needs to be provided.
261 </p>
263 <p class="issue">
264 The following definition should be rewritten to use
265 the concept of <a href="http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-transforms/#3d-rendering-context">3D rendering context</a> [[!CSS3-TRANSFORMS]]
266 and related terms,
267 particularly once those concepts stabilize following changes
268 proposed in the CSS WG meeting on the morning of 2014-01-28.
269 </p>
271 <p>
272 Given the following definitions
273 <span class="issue">which belong in [[CSS3-TRANSFORMS]]</span>:
274 </p>
276 <dl>
277 <dt><dfn>3d-preserving child</dfn></dt>
278 <dd>
279 A child box B of a containing block C is a 3d-preserving
280 child if it has ''transform-style: preserve-3d''
281 and the user-agent is not required to flatten it
282 based on the <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-transforms/#transform-style-property">requirements</a> in [[!CSS3-TRANSFORMS]].
283 </dt>
284 <dt><dfn>non-3d-preserving child</dfn></dt>
285 <dd>
286 A child C of a box P is a non-3d-preserving-child if
287 it is not a <a>3d-preserving child</a>.
288 </dd>
289 <dt><dfn>3d-preserving descendant</dfn></dt>
290 <dd>
291 Box D is a 3d-preserving descendant of box A if A is
292 an ancestor of D, and D and all of the boxes (if any)
293 in the containing block chain from D to A
294 are <a>3d-preserving child</a> boxes.
295 </dd>
296 </dl>
298 <p>The scrollable overflow of a box is the union of the following things,
299 all adjusted for transforms <span class="issue">undefined concept!</span> into the box's coordinate space:</p>
301 <ul>
302 <li>
303 for the box and all of its <a>3d-preserving descendant</a> boxes:
304 <ul>
305 <li>the box's own padding edge (for the box itself) or border edge (for <a>3d-preserving descendant</a> boxes)</li>
306 <li>the bounds <span class="issue">undefined term!</span> of any text directly in the box</li>
307 <li><span class="issue">MORE HERE!</span>
308 </ul>
309 <li>
310 for all the <a>non-3d-preserving child</a> boxes of the
311 box and its <a>3d-preserving descendant</a> boxes,
312 the scrollable overflow of the box
313 </li>
314 </ul>
316 <p class="issue">
317 I wrote this definition off the top of my head,
318 so it can't possibly be right.
319 It's missing tons of pieces!
320 </p>
322 <p class="issue">
323 The handling of preserve-3d subtrees here is probably wrong;
324 the elements should probably count
325 only towards the overflow of the element that flattens them.
326 </p>
328 <p>
329 The <dfn>scrollable overflow region</dfn> is the non-rectangular region
330 occupied by the <a>scrollable overflow</a>, and the
331 <dfn>scrollable overflow rectangle</dfn> is
332 the minimal rectangle whose axis is aligned to the box's axes
333 and contains the <a>scrollable overflow region</a>.
334 Note that the <a>scrollable overflow rectangle</a> is a rectangle
335 in the box's coordinate system, but might be non-rectangular
336 in other coordinate systems due to transforms [[CSS3-TRANSFORMS]].
337 </p>
339 <h3 id="border-box-overflow">Border box overflow</h3>
341 <p class="issue">
342 This concept has been proposed for some uses, such as for
343 determining what the 'outline' property goes around, and
344 as the basis of a coordinate system for specifying clips and masks,
345 but it's not clear if it's needed.
346 </p>
348 <p>
349 The <dfn>border-box overflow</dfn> of a box is the
350 union of the box's border edge and the border edges of
351 the box's descendants.</p>
352 </p>
354 <p class="issue">
355 If needed, define more formally, as for scrollable overflow above.
356 (Maybe even share the definitions in an appropriate way!)
357 </p>
359 <p>
360 The <dfn>border-box overflow region</dfn> is the non-rectangular region
361 occupied by the <a>border-box overflow</a>, and the
362 <dfn>border-box overflow rectangle</dfn> is
363 the minimal rectangle whose axis is aligned to the box's axes
364 and contains the <a>border-box overflow region</a>.
365 Note that the <a>border-box overflow rectangle</a> is a rectangle
366 in the box's coordinate system, but might be non-rectangular
367 in other coordinate systems due to transforms [[CSS3-TRANSFORMS]].
368 </p>
370 <h2 id="overflow-properties">Overflow properties</h2>
372 <p>
373 The 'overflow-x' property specifies
374 the handling of overflow in the horizontal direction
375 (i.e., overflow from the left and right sides of the box),
376 and the 'overflow-y' property specifies the handling
377 of overflow in the vertical direction
378 (i.e., overflow from the top and bottom sides of the box)
379 </p>
381 <pre class=propdef>
382 Name: overflow-x, overflow-y
383 Value: ''visible'' | ''hidden'' | ''scroll'' | ''auto''
384 Initial: ''visible''
385 Applies to: block containers [[!CSS21]], flex containers [[!CSS3-FLEXBOX]], and grid containers [[!CSS3-GRID-LAYOUT]]
386 Inherited: no
387 Percentages: N/A
388 Media: visual
389 Computed value: see below
390 Animatable: no
391 Canonical order: <abbr title="follows order of property value definition">per grammar</abbr>
392 </pre>
394 <p>
395 The 'overflow' property is a shorthand property
396 that sets the specified values of both 'overflow-x' and 'overflow-y'
397 to the value specified for 'overflow'.
398 </p>
400 <pre class=propdef>
401 Name: overflow
402 Value: ''visible'' | ''hidden'' | ''scroll'' | ''auto''
403 Initial: see individual properties
404 Applies to: block containers [[!CSS21]], flex containers [[!CSS3-FLEXBOX]], and grid containers [[!CSS3-GRID-LAYOUT]]
405 Inherited: no
406 Percentages: N/A
407 Media: visual
408 Computed value: see individual properties
409 Animatable: no
410 Canonical order: <abbr title="follows order of property value definition">per grammar</abbr>
411 </pre>
413 <div id="overflow-computed-values">
414 <p>The computed values of 'overflow-x' and 'overflow-y'
415 are determined from the cascaded values [[!CSS3CASCADE]]
416 based on the following rules:</p>
418 <ol>
419 <li>
420 If one cascaded values is ''overflow/visible''
421 and the other is not,
422 then computed values are the cascaded values
423 with ''overflow/visible'' changed to ''overflow/auto''.
424 </li>
425 <li>
426 Otherwise, the computed values are as specified.
427 </li>
428 </ol>
429 </div>
431 <p>The values of these properties are:</p>
433 <dl dfn-for="overflow" dfn-type="value">
434 <dt><dfn>visible</dfn>
435 <dd>
436 There is no special handling of overflow, that is, it
437 may be rendered outside the block container.
438 </dd>
439 <dt><dfn>hidden</dfn>
440 <dt><dfn>scroll</dfn>
441 <dt><dfn>auto</dfn>
442 <dd>
443 <p class="issue">
444 Move material from [[CSS21]] and [[CSS3BOX]] here.
445 </p>
446 </dd>
447 </dl>
449 <p class="issue">
450 Explain which directions allow scrolling and which don't,
451 as a function of 'direction'
452 (including propagation of 'direction' to the ICB).
453 </p>
456 <p class="issue">
457 [[CSS3-MARQUEE]] describes an 'overflow-style' property,
458 but it has not picked up implementation experience
459 that the working group is aware of.
460 Should this document treat 'overflow-style' as a defunct proposal,
461 or should this document describe the 'overflow-style' property
462 and attempt to revive it,
463 despite that implementations have implemented
464 'overflow-x' and 'overflow-y' instead?
465 </p>
467 <h2 id="fragmentation">Fragmentation of overflow</h2>
469 The 'continue' property gives authors the ability
470 to request that content that does not fit inside an element
471 be fragmented (in the sense of [[!CSS3-BREAK]]),
472 and provides alternatives
473 for where the remaining content should continue.
475 Notably, this property explains traditional pagination,
476 and extends it further.
478 <pre class=propdef>
479 Name: continue
480 Value: ''next'' | ''overflow'' | ''paginate'' | ''fragments'' | ''discard''
481 Initial: next
482 Applies to: block containers [[!CSS21]], flex containers [[!CSS3-FLEXBOX]], and grid containers [[!CSS3-GRID-LAYOUT]]
483 Inherited: no
484 Percentages: N/A
485 Media: visual
486 Computed value: see below
487 Animatable: no
488 Canonical order: <abbr title="follows order of property value definition">per grammar</abbr>
489 </pre>
492 Note: ''continue: fragments'' replaces "overflow:fragments"
493 from earlier versions of this specification,
494 while ''continue: paginate'' replaces "overflow: paged-x | paged-y | paged-x-controls | paged-y-controls"
496 <dl dfn-for="continue" dfn-type="value">
497 <dt><dfn>next</dfn>
498 <dd>Content that doesn't fit is pushed to the next region
499 if the element is a <a spec="css-regions">CSS Region</a>
500 other than the last one in a <a spec="css-regions">region chain</a>,
501 or to the next page if the element is part of a page chain,
502 or to the next <a>fragment box</a> if the element is a <a>fragment box</a>
503 Otherwise, it overflows.
505 <dt><dfn>overflow</dfn>
506 <dd>Content that doesn't fit overflows, according to the 'overflow' property
508 <dt><dfn>discard</dfn>
509 <dd>Content that doesn't fit is discarded at a fragmentation break
511 Note: generalized from region-fragment: break; on the last region of a region chain
513 Issue: When the element isn't a <a spec="css-break">fragmentation container</a> already,
514 should this work by turning it directly into one,
515 or by creating a <a>fragment box</a> inside it like ''continue/fragments'' does?
517 <dt><dfn>paginate</dfn>
518 <dd>Content that doesn't fit paginates.
519 This creates a paginated view inside the element
520 similar to the way that 'overflow: scroll' creates a scrollable view.
522 See <a href="#paginated-overflow">paginated overflow</a>
524 Note: Print is effectively "continue: paginate" on the root.
525 <dt><dfn>fragments</dfn>
526 <dd>content that doesn't fit causes the element to copy itself and continue laying out.
528 See <a href="#fragment-overflow">fragment overflow</a>.
529 </dl>
531 The computed value of the 'continue' for a given element or pseudo element is determined as follow:
532 <ol>
533 <li>If the specified value is ''continue/next''
534 <ol>
535 <li>On a <a spec="css-regions">CSS Region</a> other than the last one in a <a spec="css-regions">region chain</a>,
536 the computed value is ''continue/next''
537 <li>On a page
538 the computed value is ''continue/paginate''
539 <li>On a <a>fragment box</a>
540 the computed value is ''continue/fragments''
541 <li>Otherwise, the computed value is 'continue/overflow''
542 </ol>
543 <li>If the specified value is ''continue/framgents''
544 <ol>
545 <li>On a page
546 the computed value is ''continue/paginate''
547 <li>Otherwise, the computed value is the specified value
548 </ol>
549 <li>In all other cases, the computed value is the specified value
550 </ol>
552 Issue: The naming of this property and its values is preliminary.
553 This was initially proposed as
554 "fragmentation: auto | none | break | clone | page"
555 in <a href="https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2015Jan/0357.html">https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2015Jan/0357.html</a>.
557 Note: For background discussions leading to this property, see these threads:
558 <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2012May/1197.html">discussion of overflow, overflow-x, overflow-y and overflow-style</a> and
559 <a href="https://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/2015Jan/0357.html">proposal for a fragmentation property</a>
561 <h2 id="paginated-overflow">Paginated overflow</h2>
563 This section introduces and defines the meaning of the ''continue/paginate'' value of the 'continue' property.
565 Issue: Write this section
567 Issue: The initial proposal in [[CSS3GCPM]] and implemantation from Opera
568 used 4 values instead of ''continue/paginate'':
569 "paged-x | paged-y | paged-x-controls | paged-y-controls".
570 Should this property also include these values,
571 or are they better handled as separate properties?
572 (e.g.: "pagination-layout: auto | horizontal | vertical", "pagination-controls: auto | none")
574 Issue: Ability to display N pages at once
575 rather than just one page at once?
576 Could this be a value of "pagination-layout", such as:
577 "pagination-layout: horizontal 2;"
579 <p class="issue">
580 The current implementation of paginated overflow uses
581 the 'overflow'/'overflow-x'/'overflow-y' properties
582 rather than the 'overflow-style' property as proposed
583 in the [[CSS3GCPM]] draft
584 (which also matches the [[CSS3-MARQUEE]] proposal).
585 or the 'continue' property as described here.
586 </p>
588 <h2 id="fragment-overflow">Fragment overflow</h2>
590 This section introduces and defines the meaning of
591 the ''continue/fragments'' value of the 'continue' property.
593 <p>
594 When the computed value of 'continue' for an element is ''continue/fragments'',
595 and implementations would otherwise have created a box for the element,
596 then implementations must create a sequence of <dfn>fragment box</dfn>es
597 for that element.
598 (It is possible for an element with ''continue: fragments''
599 to generate only one <a>fragment box</a>.
600 However, if an element's computed 'continue' is not ''continue/fragments'',
601 then its box is not a <a>fragment box</a>.)
602 Every <a>fragment box</a> is a fragmentation container,
603 and any overflow
604 that would cause that fragmentation container to fragment
605 causes another <a>fragment box</a> created as a next sibling
606 of the previous one.
607 <span class="issue">Or is it as though it's a next sibling of
608 the element? Need to figure out exactly how this interacts with
609 other box-level fixup.</span>
610 Additionally, if the <a>fragment box</a> is also
611 a multi-column box (as defined in [[!CSS3COL]]
612 <span class="issue">though it defines <i>multi-column element</i></span>)
613 any content that would lead to the creation of <a>overflow columns</a> [[!CSS3COL]]
614 instead is flown into an additional fragment box.
615 However, fragment boxes may themselves be broken
616 (due to fragmentation in a fragmentation context outside of them,
617 such as pages, columns, or other fragment boxes);
618 such breaking leads to fragments of the same fragment box
619 rather than multiple fragment boxes.
620 (This matters because fragment boxes may be styled by their index;
621 such breaking leads to multiple fragments of a fragment box
622 with a single index.
623 This design choice is so that
624 breaking a fragment box across pages does not break
625 the association of indices to particular pieces of content.)
626 <span class="issue">Should a forced break that breaks to
627 an outer fragmentation context cause a new fragment of a single
628 fragment box or a new fragment box?</span>
629 <span class="issue">Should we find a term other than
630 <a>fragment box</a> here to make this a little less confusing?</span>
631 </p>
633 <p class="issue">
634 What if we want to be able to style the pieces of an element
635 split within another type of fragmentation context?
636 These rules prevent ever using ''::nth-fragment()'' for that,
637 despite that the name seems the most logical name for such a feature.
638 </p>
640 <div class="example">
641 <table class="source-demo-pair"><tr><td><pre><!DOCTYPE HTML>
642 <title>Breaking content into
643 equal-sized cards</title>
644 <style>
645 .in-cards {
646 continue: fragments;
648 width: 13em;
649 height: 8em;
651 padding: 4px;
652 border: medium solid blue;
653 margin: 6px;
655 font: medium/1.3 Times New
656 Roman, Times, serif;
657 }
658 </style>
659 <div class="in-cards">
660 In this example, the text in the div
661 is broken into a series of cards.
662 These cards all have the same style.
663 The presence of enough content to
664 overflow one of the cards causes
665 another one to be created. The second
666 card is created just like it's the
667 next sibling of the first.
668 </div></pre></td><td>
669 <div class="in-cards-demo">In this example, the text in the<br>div is broken into a series of<br>cards. These cards all have the<br>same style. The presence of<br>enough content to overflow<br>one of the cards causes another</div>
670 <div class="in-cards-demo">one to be created. The second<br>card is created just like it's the<br>next sibling of the first.</div>
671 </td></tr></table>
672 </div>
674 <p class="issue">
675 We should specify that ''continue: fragments'' does not apply
676 to at least some table parts,
677 and perhaps other elements as well.
678 We need to determine exactly which ones.
679 </p>
681 <p class="issue">
682 This specification needs to say which type of
683 fragmentation context is created
684 so that it's clear which values of the 'break-*' properties
685 cause breaks within this context.
686 We probably want ''break-*: region'' to apply.
687 </p>
689 <p class="issue">
690 This specification needs a processing model
691 that will apply in cases where the layout containing the
692 fragments has characteristics that use the intrinsic size of the fragments
693 to change the amount of space available for them,
694 such as [[CSS3-GRID-LAYOUT]].
695 There has already been some work on such a processing model
696 in [[CSS3-REGIONS]],
697 and the work done on a model there,
698 and the editors of that specification,
699 should inform what happens in this specification.
700 </p>
702 <h3 id="fragment-styling">Fragment styling</h3>
704 <h4 id="fragment-pseudo-element">The ::nth-fragment() pseudo-element</h4>
706 <p>
707 The <dfn selector>::nth-fragment()</dfn> pseudo-element
708 is a pseudo-element
709 that describes some of the <a>fragment box</a>es generated by an element.
710 The argument to the pseudo-element takes the same syntax
711 as the argument to the :nth-child() pseudo-class
712 defined in [[!SELECT]], and has the same meaning
713 except that the number is relative to
714 <a>fragment box</a>es generated by the element
715 instead of siblings of the element.
716 </p>
718 <p class="note">
719 Selectors that allow addressing fragments
720 by counting from the end rather than the start
721 are intentionally not provided.
722 Such selectors would interfere with determining
723 the number of fragments.
724 </p>
726 <p class="issue">
727 Depending on future discussions,
728 this ''::nth-fragment(<var>an+b</var>)'' syntax
729 may be replaced with
730 the new ''::fragment:nth(<var>an+b</var>)'' syntax.
731 </p>
733 <h4 id="style-of-fragments">Styling of fragments</h4>
735 <p class="issue">
736 Should this apply to continue:fragments only,
737 or also to continue:paginate?
738 (If it applies,
739 then stricter property restrictions would be needed
740 for continue:paginate.)
741 </p>
743 <p>
744 In the absence of rules with ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-elements,
745 the computed style for each <a>fragment box</a>
746 is the computed style for the element
747 for which the <a>fragment box</a> was created.
748 However, the style for a <a>fragment box</a> is also influenced
749 by rules whose selector's <a>subject</a> [[!SELECT]]
750 has an ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element,
751 if the 1-based number of the <a>fragment box</a> matches
752 that ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element
753 and the selector (excluding the ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element)
754 matches the element generating the fragments.
755 </p>
757 <p>
758 When determining the style of the <a>fragment box</a>,
759 these rules that match the fragment pseudo-element
760 cascade together with the rules that match the element,
761 with the fragment pseudo-element adding the specificity
762 of a pseudo-class to the specificity calculation.
763 <span class="issue">Does this need to be specified in
764 the cascading module as well?</span>
765 </p>
767 <div class="example">
768 <table class="source-demo-pair"><tr><td><pre><!DOCTYPE HTML>
769 <style>
770 .bouncy-columns {
771 continue: fragments;
772 width: 6em;
773 height: 10em;
774 float: left;
775 margin: 1em;
776 font: medium/1.25 Times New
777 Roman, Times, serif;
778 }
779 .bouncy-columns::nth-fragment(1) {
780 background: aqua; color: black;
781 transform: rotate(-3deg);
782 }
783 .bouncy-columns::nth-fragment(2) {
784 background: yellow; color: black;
785 transform: rotate(3deg);
786 }
787 </style>
788 <div class="bouncy-columns">
789 <i>...</i>
790 </div></pre></td><td>
791 <div class="bouncy-columns-demo one">In this<br>example, the<br>text in the div<br>is broken into<br>a series of<br>columns. The<br>author<br>probably</div>
792 <div class="bouncy-columns-demo two">intended the<br>text to fill two<br>columns. But<br>if it happens to<br>fill three<br>columns, the<br>third column is<br>still created. It</div>
793 <div class="bouncy-columns-demo">just doesn't<br>have any<br>fragment-specific<br>styling because<br>the author<br>didn't give it<br>any.</div>
794 </td></tr></table>
795 </div>
797 <p>
798 Styling an ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element with the 'continue'
799 property does take effect;
800 if a <a>fragment box</a> has a
801 computed value of 'continue' other than ''fragments''
802 then that fragment box is the last fragment.
803 However, overriding 'continue' on the first fragment
804 does not cause the <a>fragment box</a> not to exist;
805 whether there are fragment boxes at all is determined by
806 the computed value of overflow for the element.
807 </p>
809 <p>
810 Styling an ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element with the 'content'
811 property has no effect;
812 the computed value of 'content' for the fragment box
813 remains the same as the computed value of content for the element.
814 </p>
816 <p>
817 Specifying ''display: none'' for a <a>fragment box</a> causes
818 the fragment box with that index not to be generated.
819 However, in terms of the indices
820 used for matching ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-elements
821 of later fragment boxes,
822 it still counts as though it was generated.
823 However, since it is not generated, it does not contain any content.
824 </p>
826 <p>
827 Specifying other values of 'display', 'position',
828 or 'float' is permitted, but is not allowed to change
829 the computed value of 'display-inside'.
830 (Since 'continue' only
831 applies to block containers, flex containers, and grid containers
832 the computed value of 'display-inside' is always
833 ''display-inside/block'', ''display-inside/flex'', or
834 ''display-inside/grid''.
835 <span class="issue">Need to specify exactly how this works,
836 but it depends on
837 having 'display-inside' and 'display-outside' specified.</span>
838 </p>
840 <p>
841 To match the model for other pseudo-elements
842 where the pseudo-elements live inside their corresponding element,
843 declarations in ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-elements override
844 declarations in rules without the pseudo-element.
845 The relative priority within such declarations is determined
846 by normal cascading order (see [[!CSS21]]).
847 </p>
849 <p>
850 Styles specified on ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-elements
851 do affect inheritance to content within the <a>fragment box</a>.
852 In other words, the content within the <a>fragment box</a> must
853 inherit from the fragment box's style (i.e., the pseudo-element style)
854 rather than directly from the element.
855 This means that elements split between fragment boxes may
856 have different styles for different parts of the element.
857 </p>
859 <p class="issue">
860 This inheritance rule allows specifying styles indirectly
861 (by using explicit ''inherit'' or using default inheritance
862 on properties that don't apply to ''::first-letter'')
863 that can't be specified directly
864 (based on the rules in the next section).
865 This is a problem.
866 The restrictions that apply to styling inside fragments
867 should also apply to inheritance from fragments.
868 </p>
870 <div class="example">
871 <table class="source-demo-pair"><tr><td><pre><!DOCTYPE HTML>
872 <style>
873 .article {
874 continue: fragments;
875 }
876 .article::nth-fragment(1) {
877 font-size: 1.5em;
878 margin-bottom: 1em;
879 height: 4em;
880 }
881 .article::nth-fragment(2) {
882 margin-left: 5em;
883 margin-right: 2em;
884 }
885 </style>
886 <div class="article">
887 The <code>font-size</code> property<i>...</i>
888 </div></pre></td><td>
889 <div class="article-font-inherit-demo one">The <code>font-size</code> property<br>specified on the fragment<br>is inherited into the</div>
890 <div class="article-font-inherit-demo two">descendants of the fragment.<br>This means that inherited<br>properties can be used<br>reliably on a fragment, as in<br>this example.</div>
891 </td></tr></table>
892 </div>
894 <h4 id="style-in-fragments">Styling inside fragments</h4>
896 <p class="issue">
897 Should this apply to continue:fragments only,
898 or also to continue:paginate?
899 </p>
901 <p>
902 The ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element
903 can also be used to style
904 content inside of a <a>fragment box</a>.
905 Unlike the ''::first-line'' and ''::first-letter'' pseudo-elements,
906 the ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element can be applied
907 to parts of the selector other than the subject:
908 in particular, it can match ancestors of the subject.
909 However, the only CSS properties applied
910 by rules with such selectors
911 are those that apply
912 to the ''::first-letter'' pseudo-element.
913 </p>
915 <p>
916 To be more precise,
917 when a rule's selector has ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-elements
918 attached to parts of the selector other than the subject,
919 the declarations in that rule apply to
920 a fragment (or pseudo-element thereof) when:
921 </p>
922 <ol>
923 <li>
924 the declarations are for properties that apply to the
925 ''::first-letter'' pseudo-element,
926 </li>
927 <li>
928 the declarations would apply to
929 that fragment (or pseudo-element thereof)
930 had those ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-elements been removed,
931 with a particular association between
932 each sequence of simple selectors and the element it matched,
933 and
934 </li>
935 <li>
936 for each removed ''::nth-fragment()'' pseudo-element,
937 the fragment lives within a <a>fragment box</a>
938 of the element associated in that association
939 with the selector that the pseudo-element was attached to,
940 and whose index matches the pseudo-element.
941 </li>
942 </ol>
944 <div class="example">
945 <table class="source-demo-pair"><tr><td><pre><!DOCTYPE HTML>
946 <style>
947 .dark-columns {
948 continue: fragments;
949 width: 6em;
950 height: 10em;
951 float: left;
952 margin-right: 1em;
953 font: medium/1.25 Times New
954 Roman, Times, serif;
955 }
956 .dark-columns::nth-fragment(1) {
957 background: aqua; color: black;
958 }
959 .dark-columns::nth-fragment(1) :link {
960 color: blue;
961 }
962 .dark-columns::nth-fragment(1) :visited {
963 color: purple;
964 }
965 .dark-columns::nth-fragment(2) {
966 background: navy; color: white;
967 }
968 .dark-columns::nth-fragment(2) :link {
969 color: aqua;
970 }
971 .dark-columns::nth-fragment(2) :visited {
972 color: fuchsia;
973 }
974 </style>
975 <div class="dark-columns">
976 <i>...</i>
977 </div></pre></td><td>
978 <div class="dark-columns-demo one">In this<br><a href="http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/example">example</a>, the<br>text flows<br>from one<br>light-colored<br>fragment into<br>another<br>dark-colored</div>
979 <div class="dark-columns-demo two">fragment. We<br>therefore want<br>different styles<br>for <a href="http://www.w3.org/Provider/Style/IntoContext.html">hyperlinks</a><br>in the different<br>fragments.</div>
980 </td></tr></table>
981 </div>
984 <h3 id="max-lines">The 'max-lines' property</h3>
986 <p>
987 Authors may wish to style the opening lines of an element
988 with different styles
989 by putting those opening lines in a separate fragment.
990 However, since it may be difficult to predict the exact height
991 occupied by those lines
992 in order to restrict the first fragment to that height,
993 this specification introduces a 'max-lines' property
994 that forces a fragment to break
995 after a specified number of lines.
996 This forces a break after the given number of lines
997 contained within the element or its descendants,
998 as long as those lines are in the same block formatting context.
999 </p>
1001 <pre class=propdef>
1002 Name: max-lines
1003 Value: ''none'' | <<integer>>
1004 Initial: ''none''
1005 Applies to: fragment boxes
1006 Inherited: no
1007 Animatable: as <a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-transitions/#animatable-types">integer</a>
1008 Percentages: N/A
1009 Media: visual
1010 Computed value: specified value
1011 Canonical order: <abbr title="follows order of property value definition">per grammar</abbr>
1012 </pre>
1014 <dl dfn-for="max-lines" dfn-type="value">
1015 <dt><dfn>none</dfn>
1016 <dd>
1017 <p>
1018 Breaks occur only as specified elsewhere.
1019 </p>
1020 </dd>
1022 <dt><dfn><<integer>></dfn>
1023 <dd>
1024 <p>
1025 In addition to any breaks specified elsewhere,
1026 a break is forced before any line that would exceed
1027 the given number of lines
1028 being placed inside the element
1029 (excluding lines that are in
1030 a different block formatting context from
1031 the block formatting context to which
1032 an unstyled child of the element would belong).
1033 </p>
1035 <p class="issue">
1036 If there are multiple boundaries between this line
1037 and the previous, where exactly (in terms of element
1038 boundaries) is the break forced?
1039 </p>
1041 <p>
1042 Only positive integers are accepted.
1043 Zero or negative integers are a parse error.
1044 </p>
1045 </dd>
1046 </dl>
1048 <p class="issue">Should this apply to fragment overflow only, or also
1049 to pagination?</p>
1051 <div class="example">
1052 <table class="source-demo-pair"><tr><td><pre><!DOCTYPE HTML>
1053 <style>
1054 .article {
1055 continue: fragments;
1056 }
1057 .article::first-letter {
1058 font-size: 2em;
1059 line-height: 0.9;
1060 }
1061 .article::nth-fragment(1) {
1062 font-size: 1.5em;
1063 max-lines: 3;
1064 }
1065 .article::nth-fragment(2) {
1066 column-count: 2;
1067 }
1068 </style>
1069 <div class="article">
1070 <i>...</i>
1071 </div></pre></td><td>
1072 <div class="article-max-lines-demo one">The max-lines property allows<br>authors to use a larger font for the first<br>few lines of an article. Without the</div>
1073 <div class="article-max-lines-demo two">max-lines property, authors<br>might have to use the<br>'height' property instead, but<br>that would leave a slight gap<br>if the author miscalculated<br>how much height a given<br>number of lines would<br>occupy (which might be</div>
1074 <div class="article-max-lines-demo three">particularly hard if the author<br>didn't know what text would<br>be filling the space, exactly<br>what font would be used, or<br>exactly which platform's font<br>rendering would be used to<br>display the font).</div>
1075 </td></tr></table>
1076 </div>
1078 <h2 id="static-media">Overflow in static media</h2>
1080 <p class="issue">
1081 This specification should define useful behavior
1082 for all values of 'overflow' and 'continue'
1083 in static media (such as print).
1084 Current implementation behavior is quite poor and
1085 produces unexpected results when authors have not considered
1086 what will happen when
1087 the content they produce for interactive media
1088 is printed.
1089 </p>
1091 <h2 class=no-num id="acknowledgments">
1092 Acknowledgments</h2>
1094 <p>
1095 Thanks especially to the feedback from
1096 Rossen Atanassov,
1097 Bert Bos,
1098 Tantek Ãelik,
1099 John Daggett,
1100 fantasai,
1101 Daniel Glazman,
1102 Vincent Hardy,
1103 Håkon Wium Lie,
1104 Peter Linss,
1105 Robert O'Callahan,
1106 Florian Rivoal,
1107 Alan Stearns,
1108 Steve Zilles,
1109 and all the rest of the
1110 <a href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-style/">www-style</a> community.
1111 </p>