How to achieve same output without <br>?
<p>hello <br> How are you </p>
output:
hello
How are you
You can use white-space: pre; to make elements act like <pre>, which preserves newlines. Example:
p {
white-space: pre;
}
<p>hello
How are you</p>
Note for IE that this only works in IE8+.
Impossible with the same HTML structure, you must have something to distinguish between Hello and How are you.
I suggest using spans that you will then display as blocks (just like a <div> actually).
p span {
display: block;
}
<p><span>hello</span><span>How are you</span></p>
Use <br/> as normal, but hide it with display: none when you don't want it.
I would expect most people finding this question want to use css / responsive design to decide whether or not a line-break appears in a specific place. (and don't have anything personal against <br/>)
While not immediately obvious, you can actually apply display:none to a <br/> tag to hide it, which enables the use of media queries in tandem with semantic BR tags.
<div>
The quick brown fox<br />
jumps over the lazy dog
</div>
#media screen and (min-width: 20em) {
br {
display: none; /* hide the BR tag for wider screens (i.e. disable the line break) */
}
}
This is useful in responsive design where you need to force text into two lines at an exact break.
jsfiddle example
There are several options for defining the handling of white spaces and line breaks.
If one can put the content in e.g. a <p> tag it is pretty easy to get whatever one wants.
For preserving line breaks but not white spaces use pre-line (not pre) like in:
<style>
p {
white-space: pre-line; /* collapse WS, preserve LB */
}
</style>
<p>hello
How are you</p>
If another behavior is wanted choose among one of these (WS=WhiteSpace, LB=LineBreak):
white-space: normal; /* collapse WS, wrap as necessary, collapse LB */
white-space: nowrap; /* collapse WS, no wrapping, collapse LB */
white-space: pre; /* preserve WS, no wrapping, preserve LB */
white-space: pre-wrap; /* preserve WS, wrap as necessary, preserve LB */
white-space: inherit; /* all as parent element */
SOURCE: W3 Schools
The "\a" command in CSS generates a carriage return. This is CSS, not HTML, so it shall be closer to what you want: no extra markup.
In a blockquote, the example below displays both the title and the source link and separate the two with a carriage return ("\a"):
blockquote[title][cite]:after {
content:attr(title)"\a"attr(cite)
}
In the CSS use the code
p {
white-space: pre-line;
}
With this CSS every enter inside the P tag will be a break-line at the HTML.
Building on what has been said before, this is a pure CSS solution that works.
<style>
span {
display: inline;
}
span:before {
content: "\a ";
white-space: pre;
}
</style>
<p>
First line of text. <span>Next line.</span>
</p>
To make an element have a line break afterwards, assign it:
display:block;
Non-floated elements after a block level element will appear on the next line. Many elements, such as <p> and <div> are already block level elements so you can just use those.
But while this is good to know, this really depends more on the context of your content. In your example, you would not want to use CSS to force a line break. The <br /> is appropriate because semantically the p tag is the the most appropriate for the text you are displaying. More markup just to hang CSS off it is unnecessary. Technically it's not exactly a paragraph, but there is no <greeting> tag, so use what you have. Describing your content well with HTMl is way more important - after you have that then figure out how to make it look pretty.
<pre> <---------------------------------------
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
</pre> <--------------------------------------
OR
<div style="white-space:pre"> <-----------------------------------
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
lorem ipsum
</div> <-----------------------------------
source: https://stackoverflow.com/a/36191199/2377343
Here's a bad solution to a bad question, but one that literally meets the brief:
p {
width : 12ex;
}
p:before {
content: ".";
float: right;
padding-left: 6ex;
visibility: hidden;
}
Use overflow-wrap: break-word; like:
.yourelement{
overflow-wrap: break-word;
}
Maybe someone will have the same issue as me:
I was in a element with display: flex so I had to use flex-direction: column.
For a List of Links
The other answers provide some good ways of adding line breaks, depending on the situation. But it should be noted that the :after selector is one of the better ways to do this for CSS control over lists of links (and similar things), for reasons noted below.
Here's an example, assuming a table of contents:
<style type="text/css">
.toc a:after{ content: "\a"; white-space: pre; }
</style>
<span class="toc">
Item A1 Item A2
Item B1 Item B2
</span>
And here's Simon_Weaver's technique, which is simpler and more compatible. It doesn't separate style and content as much, requires more code, and there may be cases where you want to add breaks after the fact. Still a great solution though, especially for older IE.
<style type="text/css">
.toc br{ display: none; } /* comment out for horizontal links */
</style>
<span class="toc">
Item A1<br/> Item A2<br/>
Item B1<br/> Item B2<br/>
</span>
Note the advantages of the above solutions:
No matter the whitespace in the HTML, the output is the same (vs. pre)
No extra padding is added to the elements (see NickG's display:block comments)
You can easily switch between horizontal and vertical lists of links with some shared CSS without going into every HTML file for a style change
No float or clear styles affecting surrounding content
The style is separate from the content (vs. <br/>, or pre with hard-coded breaks)
This can also work for loose links using a.toc:after and <a class="toc">
You can add multiple breaks and even prefix/suffix text
Setting a br tag to display: none is helpful, but then you can end up with WordsRunTogether. I've found it more helpful to instead replace it with a space character, like so:
HTML:
<h1>
Breaking<br />News:<br />BR<br />Considered<br />Harmful!
</h1>
CSS:
#media (min-device-width: 1281px){
h1 br {content: ' ';}
h1 br:after {content: ' ';}
}
I like very simple solutions, here is one more:
<p>hello <span>How are you</span></p>
and CSS:
p {
display: flex;
flex-direction: column;
}
How about<pre> tag?
source: http://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_pre.asp
The code can be:
<div class="text-class"><span>hello</span><span>How are you</span></div>
CSS would be:
.text-class {
display: flex;
justify-content: flex-start;
flex-direction: column;
align-items: center;
}
You need to declare the content within <span class="class_name"></span>. After it the line will be break.
\A means line feed character.
.class_name::after {
content: "\A";
white-space: pre;
}
You can add a lot of padding and force text to be split to new line, for example
p {
padding-right: 50%;
}
Worked fine for me in a situation with responsive design, where only within a certain width range it was needed for text to be split.
Using white-space will not work for long sentences without spaces like HiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGood...etc to fix this consider using word-wrap: break-word; instead
it's made to allow long words to be able to break and wrap onto the next line., its used by Facebook, Instagram and me 😆
Example
#container {
width: 40%;
background-color: grey;
overflow:hidden;
margin:10px;
}
#container p{
white-space: pre-line;
background-color: green;
}
.flex{
display: flex;
}
#wrap {
width: 30%;
background-color: grey;
overflow:hidden;
margin:10px;
}
#wrap p{
word-wrap: break-word;
background-color: green;
}
<h1> white-space: pre-line;</h1>
<div class='flex'>
<div id="container">
<h5>With spaces </h5>
<p>Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1</p>
</div>
<div id="container">
<h5>No specaes (not working )</h5> <p>HiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGoodHiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGoodHiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGood</p>
</div>
</div>
<h1> word-wrap: break-word;</h1>
<div class='flex'>
<div id="wrap">
<h5>With spaces </h5>
<p>Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1 Sample Text 1</p>
</div>
<div id="wrap">
<h5>No specaes (working )</h5> <p>HiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGoodHiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGoodHiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGoodHiHowAreYouHopeYouAreDoingGood</p>
</div>
</div>
On CSS-tricks, Chris Coyier have tested lots of options and the final and pretty neat one was using display:table, Each one have their own problems which you will find out when you use background-color on the span!
body {
padding: 20px;
font-family: 'Open Sans', sans-serif;
}
h1 {
font-weight: 300;
font-size: 24px;
line-height: 1.6;
background: #eee;
padding: 20px;
margin: 5px 0 25px 0;
text-align:center;
}
h1 span {
color: white;
font-weight: 900;
}
h1 span {
background: black;
padding: 1px 8px;
display: table;
margin:auto;
}
<h1 class="one">
Break right after this
<span>
and before this
</span>
</h1>
Here You can see all other options on codepen:
Injecting a Line Break
A modern and simple solution could be setting the width like that:
width: min-content;
This CSS rule is mostly useful for text content, but not only:
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/min-content
p {
margin: 20px;
color: #222;
font-family:'Century Gothic', sans-serif;
border: 2px dotted grey;
padding: 3px;
}
.max {
width: max-content;
}
.min {
width: min-content;
}
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head />
<body>
<p class="max"> Max width available </p>
<p class="min"> Min width available </p>
</body>
</html>
Both Vincent Robert and Joey Adams answers are valid. If you don't want, however, change the markup, you can just insert a <br /> using javascript.
There is no way to do it in CSS without changing the markup.
In my case, I needed an input button to have a line break before it.
I applied the following style to the button and it worked:
clear:both;
In case this helps someone...
You could do this:
<p>This is an <a class="on-new-line">inline link</a>?</p>
With this css:
a.on-new-line:before {
content: ' ';
font-size:0;
display:block;
line-height:0;
}
Using instead of spaces will prevent a break.
<span>I DONT WANT TO BREAK THIS LINE UP, but this text can be on any line.</span>
I'm guessing you did not want to use a breakpoint because it will always break the line. Is that correct? If so how about adding a breakpoint <br /> in your text, then giving it a class like <br class="hidebreak"/> then using media query right above the size you want it to break to hide the <br /> so it breaks at a specific width but stays inline above that width.
HTML:
<p>
The below line breaks at 766px.
</p>
<p>
This is the line of text<br class="hidebreak"> I want to break.
</p>
CSS:
#media (min-width: 767px) {
br.hidebreak {display:none;}
}
https://jsfiddle.net/517Design/o71yw5vd/
This works in Chrome:
p::after {
content: "-";
color: transparent;
display: block;
}
Related
I need to set margins between lines in one paragraph. How I can do this? I need to make something like this:
HTML:
<p>Any creative project is unique
and should be provided with
the appropriate quality</p>
I tried to put each line in <span> and set margin-bottom to it, but it not working.
Just wrap your whole text in a <span> tag and use line-height for margins and padding for spacing between text and background
Stack Snippet
p {
font: bold 30px Verdana;
}
span {
background: red;
line-height: 45px;
color: #fff;
padding: 3px;
}
<p><span>Any creative project is unique and should be provided with the appropriate quality</span></p>
If you want to use <span> with margin you need to set also display: inline-block; or display: block; to the <span>
p {
width: 200px;
}
p > span {
display: inline-block;
margin-bottom: 5px;
background-color: orange;
}
<p>
<span>Any creative project is unique</span>
<span>and should be provided with</span>
<span>the appropriate quality</span>
</p>
U can use <br> between each lines or just put a span with a height between each line, something like this:
<p>Any creative project is unique</p>
<span style="height: 10px;"></span><p>panand should be provided with</p>
Try using line-height property in your .css file referencing te element enclosing the text.
I have a div with content like this:
<div class="myDiv">
Here's some text that vary in length <span class="separator">/</span> Some other text <_other elements etc>
</div>
What I want is, only using CSS, to display the first text and hide the rest.
I have tried .myDiv *:not(:first-child) { display: none; } which hides all elements, except the first separator. All texts are still visible.
Is this even possible, only using CSS?
Edit: the text is in variable lenght, but this variation is restricted between 14 and 21 chars. It will never be line breaked. (Added this info for solutions like set the div to a width and visibility:hidden or solutions like that which is fully acceptable)
This is how I would do it:
<div class="myDiv"><span>Here's some text that vary in length</span> <span class="separator">/<span><span> Some other text </span><span><_other elements etc></span>
</div>
.myDiv > span:not(:first-child) {
display:none;
}
Here is the JSFiddle demo
Separate your text using span properly and then apply the css to hide the spans if its not the first-child
It is not possible to directly select text nodes using CSS so the logical way of achieving this would be to wrap the text in an element and hide that. Unfortunately, this is not an option in this instance as the HTML markup cannot be modified and JavaScript cannot be used.
Luckily, we can rely on two things:
The text will always be on one line
The .separator element will exist
We can therefore use a combination of overflow on .myDiv and a pseudo element in .separator to forcibly hide the unwanted text:
Add height: 1em; and line-height: 1em; to .myDiv to force it only to show one line of text
Add overflow: hidden; to .mDiv to ensure that the overflown content is hidden
Create an :after pseudo element in .separator and set it to display: block; to ensure that it is forced onto a new line. This will ensure that the separator itself (/) is still shown
.myDiv {
height: 1em;
line-height: 1em;
overflow: hidden;
}
.separator:after {
content:"";
display: block;
}
<div class="myDiv">Here's some text that vary in length <span class="separator">/</span> Some other text
<_other elements etc>
</div>
If the separator is not required the CSS can be simplified. The pseudo element can be removed and .separator itself can be set to display: block; to force it onto a new line.
.myDiv {
height: 1em;
line-height: 1em;
overflow: hidden;
}
.separator {
display: block;
}
<div class="myDiv">Here's some text that vary in length <span class="separator">/</span> Some other text
<_other elements etc>
</div>
Edited You can Use this also
.myDiv{
max-width: 28.5ch;
overflow: hidden;
white-space: nowrap;
}
OR
<style>
.myDiv *:first-child
{
display:none;
}
</style>
<div class="myDiv">Here's some text that vary in length <span class="separator"> Some other text <_other elements etc></span>
I'm not the best at HTML. Essentially I am trying to get the effect of a lot of line breaks, without filling my code with a lot of consecutive <br> tags. What I have in my head is this CSS:
.movedown {
position: relative;
down: 120px;
}
and this HTML, where my text is:
<span class="movedown">*text here*</span>
I only need it on a single page. Anyone know where I'm going wrong?
Assuming you want to inject lots of breaks between two words you can inject a span tag styled as follows:
.long-br {
display: block;
height: 12em; /* 12em is roughly 10 lines at current font size/1.2 line height */
}
<p>Hello <span class="long-br"></span> World</p>
Alternate: if you want to insert lots of breaks between two blocks of text, the ideal way is to use margins:
.long-gap {
margin-top: 12em;
}
<p>Paragraph 1</p>
<p class="long-gap">Paragraph 2</p>
Try this:
.movedown {
position: relative; //Not required
margin-top: 120px;
}
You need to use the CSS property margin-top to add some space without using line breaks.
.movedown {
margin-top: 120px;
}
down is not an existing css rule. What you should be using is a div with margin-top, this creates a space above the element.
.down {
margin-top: 50px;
}
*top text*
<div class="down">*text here*</div>
Instead of 'down' try:
top:120px;
Just use <div> elements instead of <span>.
By default div is a block style element and span is inline.
block occupies the whole row, so each new one will be on a new row.
You can change the default behaviour with CSS but better to get a grip of the basic elements first.
I have two floated divs, side by side, with p tags inside. The text within the p tags does not wrap and just overflows the container, as you can see in the text under the images:
My HTML looks like so:
<div class="submenu">
<h3>Destinations in Europe</h3>
<ul>
<li>dfgdgdgfgdg</li>
<li>dfgdgdgfgdg</li>
<li>dfgdgdgfgdg</li>
<li>dfgdgdgfgdg</li>
</ul>
<h3>Features</h3>
<div>
<img src="/assets/images/o/menu/city-feat-one.jpg" />
<h4>blahblah</h4>
<p>
khkhjhjkhkyhkighkjfkhkiyhohhjkhjlhkluoiulohlhjhiououhljhiououhljhiououhljhiououhljhiououhljhiououhl
</p>
</div>
<div>
<img src="/assets/images/o/menu/city-feat-two.jpg" />
<h4>blahblah</h4>
<p>
khkhjhjkhkyhkighkjfkhkiyhohhjkhjlhkluoiulohlhjhiououhl
</p>
</div>
</div>
My CSS:
#rb-menu-com li .submenu > div {
width:48%;
float:left;
position: relative;
}
#rb-menu-com li .submenu div p {
color:#fff;
margin: 0;
padding:0;
width:100%;
position: relative;
}
#rb-menu-com li .submenu div img {
border:1px solid #fff;
}
Has anyone experienced this before? I haven't!! Driving me mad!
Give this style to the <p> tag.
p {
word-break: break-all;
white-space: normal;
}
Word wrapping only occurs when there is a word break.
If you have a "word" that is as long as that, then there is no place for it to break.
The proper solution is to write real content and not nonsense strings of characters. If you are using user generated content, then add a check for exceptionally long words and disallow them (or cut out part of them for URLs while keeping the whole thing in a link).
Alternatively, you can use the word-break CSS property to tell the browser to line break in the middle of words.
p { word-break: break-all }
(Note browser support).
Alternatively, you can use overflow to truncate the text if it won't fit in the container.
To anyone still struggling, be sure to check and see if you've set a line-height value on the font in question: it could be overriding the word wrap.
That is because you have continuous text, means single long word without space. To break it add word-break: break-all;
.submenu div p {
color:#fff;
margin: 0;
padding:0;
width:100%;
position: relative;
word-break: break-all;
background:red;
}
DEMO
This is not an answer to the question but as I found this page while looking to an answer to a problem that I had, I want to mention the solution that I found as it cost me a lot of time. In the hope this will be useful to others:
The problem was that text in a <p> tag would not fold in the div. Eventually, I opened the inspector and noticed a 'no breaking space entity' between all the words. My editor, vi, was just showing normal blank spaces (some invisible chr, I don't know what) but I had copied pasted the text from a PDF document. The solution was to copy a blank space from within vi and replace it with a blank space. ie.
:%s/ / /g where the blank to be replaced was copied from the offending text. Problem solved.
This is a little late for this question but others might benefit.
I had a similar problem but had an added requirement for the text to correctly wrap in all device sizes. So in my case this worked. Need to setup the view port.
.p
{
white-space: normal;
overflow-wrap: break-word;
width: 96vw;
}
You can use word-wrap to break words or a continuous string of characters if it doesn't fit on a line in a container.
word-wrap: break-word;
this will keep breaking lines at appropriate break points unless a single string of characters doesn't fit on a line, in that case it will break.
JSFiddle
The solutions is in fact
p{
white-space:normal;
}
You can change the break behaviors by modifying, word-break property
p{
word-break: break-all; // will break at end of line
}
break-all: Will break the string at the very end, breaking at the last word
word-break: is more of pretty brake, will break nicely for example at ? point
normal: same as word-break
If the desired result is to break the line by complete word use:
p { word-break: break-word; }
else you can use:
p { word-break: break-all; }
EASY
p{
word-wrap: break-word;
}
Adding width: 100%; to the offending p element solved the problem for me. I don't know why it works.
For others that find themselves here, the css I was looking for was
overflow-wrap: break-word;
Which will only break a word if it needs to (the length of the single word is greater than the width of the p), unlike word-break: break-all which can break the last word of every line.
overflow-wrap demo
add float: left property to the image.
#rb-menu-com li .submenu div img {
border:1px solid #fff;
float:left;
}
I have seen a question here about the same, but I can't get any of the answers to work (at least on Chrome).
This question is only for <br>, I know plenty of other techniques to change the height but in this case I can't change the HTML.
bla<BR><BR>bla<BR>bla<BR><BR>bla
CSS:
br {
display: block;
margin-bottom: 2px;
font-size:2px;
line-height: 2px;
}
Desired effect: smaller inter-line height.
The only thing I can get to work is display:none, but then all line break are removed.
Here's a fiddle for it using some of the techniques, but see that it renders the exact same as without any CSS.
This feels very hacky, but in chrome 41 on ubuntu I can make a <br> slightly stylable:
br {
content: "";
margin: 2em;
display: block;
font-size: 24%;
}
I control the spacing with the font size.
Update
I made some test cases to see how the response changes as browsers update.
*{outline: 1px solid hotpink;}
div {
display: inline-block;
width: 10rem;
margin-top: 0;
vertical-align: top;
}
h2 {
display: block;
height: 3rem;
margin-top:0;
}
.old br {
content: "";
margin: 2em;
display: block;
font-size: 24%;
outline: red;
}
.just-font br {
content: "";
display: block;
font-size: 200%;
}
.just-margin br {
content: "";
display: block;
margin: 2em;
}
.brbr br {
content: "";
display: block;
font-size: 100%;
height: 1em;
outline: red;
display: block;
}
<div class="raw">
<h2>Raw <code>br</code>rrrrs</h2>
bla<BR><BR>bla<BR>bla<BR><BR>bla
</div>
<div class="old">
<h2>margin & font size</h2>
bla<BR><BR>bla<BR>bla<BR><BR>bla
</div>
<div class="just-font">
<h2>only font size</h2>
bla<BR><BR>bla<BR>bla<BR><BR>bla
</div>
<div class="just-margin">
<h2>only margin</h2>
bla<BR><BR>bla<BR>bla<BR><BR>bla
</div>
<div class="brbr">
<h2><code>br</code>others vs only <code>br</code>s</h2>
bla<BR><BR>bla<BR>bla<BR><BR>bla
</div>
They all have their own version of strange behaviour. Other than the browser default, only the last one respects the difference between one and two brs.
You can't change the height of the br tag itself, as it's not an element that takes up space in the page. It's just an instruction to create a new line.
You can change the line height using the line-height style. That will change the distance between the text blocks that you have separated by empty lines, but natually also the distance between lines in a text block.
For completeness: Text blocks in HTML is usually done using the p tag around text blocks. That way you can control the line height inside the p tag, and also the spacing between the p tags.
Take a look at the line-height property. Trying to style the <br> tag is not the answer.
Example:
<p id="single-spaced">
This<br> text
<br> is
<br> single-spaced.
</p>
<p id="double-spaced" style="line-height: 200%;">
This<br> text
<br> is
<br> double-spaced.
</p>
The line height of the br tag can be different from the line height of the rest of the text inside a paragraph text by setting font-size for br tag.
Example: br { font-size: 200%; }
Use the content property and style that content. Content behavior is then adjusted using pseudo elements. Pseudo elements ::before and ::after both work in Mac Safari 10.0.3.
Here element br content is used as the element anchor for element br::after content. Element br is where br spacing can be styled. br::after is the place where br::after content can be displayed and styled. Looks pretty, but not a 2px <br>.
br { content: ""; display: block; margin: 1rem 0; }
br::after { content: "› "; /* content: " " space ignored */; float: left; margin-right: 0.5rem; }
The br element line-height property is ignored. If negative values are applied to either or both selectors to give vertical 'lift' to br tags in display, then correct vertical spacing occurs, but display incrementally indents display content following each br tag. The indent is exactly equal to the amount that lift varies from actual typographic line-height. If you guess the right lift, there is no indent but a single pile-up line exactly equal to raw glyph height, jammed between previous and following lines.
Further, a trailing br tag will cause the following html display tag to inherit the br:after content styling. Also, pseudo elements cause <br> <br> to be interpreted as a single <br>. While pseudo-class br:active causes each <br> to be interpreted separately. Finally, using br:active ignores pseudo element br:after and all br:active styling. So, all that's required is this:
br:active { }
which is no help for creating a 2px high <br> display. And here the pseudo class :active is ignored!
br:active { content: ""; display: block; margin: 1.25em 0; }
br { content: ""; display: block; margin: 1rem; }
br::after { content: "› "; /* content: " " space ignored */; float: left; margin-right: 0.5rem; }
This is a partial solution only. Pseudo class and pseudo element may provide solution, if tweaked. This may be part of CSS solution. (I only have Safari, try it in other browsers.)
Learn web development: pseudo classes and pseudo elements
Pay attention to global elements - BR at Mozilla.org
You can control the <br> height if you put it inside a height limited div. Try:
<div style="height:2px;"><br></div>
As the 'margin' doesn't work in Chrome, that's why I used 'border' instead.
br {
display: block;
content: "";
border-bottom: 10px solid transparent; // Works in Chrome/Safari
}
#-moz-document url-prefix() {
br {
margin-bottom: 10px; // As 'border-bottom' doesn't work in firefox and 'margin-bottom' doesn't work in Chrome/Safari.
}
}
The BR is anything but 'extra-special': it is still a valid XML tag that you can give attributes to. For example, you don't have to encase it with a span to change the line-height, rather you can apply the line height directly to the element.
You could do it with inline CSS:
This is a small line
<br />
break. Whereas, this is a BIG line
<br />
<br style="line-height:40vh"/>
break!
Notice how two line breaks were used instead of one. This is because of how CSS inline elements work. Unfourtunately, the most awesome css feature possible (the lh unit) is still not there yet with any browser compatibility as of 2019. Thus, I have to use JavaScript for the demo below.
addEventListener("load", function(document, getComputedStyle){"use strict";
var allShowLineHeights = document.getElementsByClassName("show-lh");
for (var i=0; i < allShowLineHeights.length; i=i+1|0) {
allShowLineHeights[i].textContent = getComputedStyle(
allShowLineHeights[i]
).lineHeight;
}
}.bind(null, document, getComputedStyle), {once: 1, passive: 1});
.show-lh {padding: 0 .25em}
.r {background: #f77}
.g {background: #7f5}
.b {background: #7cf}
This is a small line
<span class="show-lh r"></span><br /><span class="show-lh r"></span>
break. Whereas, this is a BIG line
<span class="show-lh g"></span><br /><span class="show-lh g"></span>
<span class="show-lh b"></span><br style="line-height:40vh"/><span class="show-lh b"></span>
break!
You can even use any CSS selectors you want like ID's and classes.
#biglinebreakid {
line-height: 450%;
// 9x the normal height of a line break!
}
.biglinebreakclass {
line-height: 1em;
// you could even use calc!
}
This is a small line
<br />
break. Whereas, this is a BIG line
<br />
<br id="biglinebreakid" />
break! You can use any CSS selectors you want for things like this line
<br />
<br class="biglinebreakclass" />
break!
You can find our more about line-height at the W3C docs.
Basically, BR tags are not some void in world of CSS styling: they still can be styled. However, I would recommend only using line-height to style BR tags. They were never intended to be anything more than a line-break, and as such they might not always work as expected when using them as something else. Observe how even after applying tons of visual effects, the line break is still invisible:
#paddedlinebreak {
display: block;
width: 6em;
height: 6em;
background: orange;
line-height: calc(6em + 100%);
outline: 1px solid red;
border: 1px solid green;
}
<div style="outline: 1px solid yellow;margin:1em;display:inline-block;overflow:visible">
This is a padded line
<br id="paddedlinebreak" />
break.
</div>
A work-around for things such as margins and paddings is to instead style a span with a br in it like so.
#paddedlinebreak {
background: orange;
line-height: calc(6em + 100%);
padding: 3em;
}
<div style="outline: 1px solid yellow;margin:1em;display:inline-block;overflow:visible">
This is a padded line
<span id="paddedlinebreak"><br /></span>
break.
</div>
Notice how the orange blob above is the span that contains the br.
#biglinebreakid {
line-height: 450%;
// 9x the normal height of a line break!
}
.biglinebreakclass {
line-height: 1em;
// you could even use calc!
}
This is a small line
<br />
break. Whereas, this is a BIG line
<br />
<br id="biglinebreakid" />
break! You can use any CSS selectors you want for things like this line
<br />
<br class="biglinebreakclass" />
break!
You can write br tag as show
<br style="content:''; padding: 10px 0;" />
Change padding value to 10px to anything you like.
Note: As padding is specified, height increases in both directions(top and bottom)
The line height of the <br> can be different from the line height of the rest of the text inside a <p>. You can control the line height of your <br> tags independently of the rest of the text by enclosing two of them in a <span> that is styled. Use the line-height css property, as others have suggested.
<p class="normalLineHeight">
Lots of text here which will display on several lines with normal line height if you put it in a narrow container...
<span class="customLineHeight"><br><br></span>
After a custom break, this text will again display on several lines with normal line height...
</p>
<font size="4"> <font color="#ffe680">something here</font><br>
I was trying all these methods but most didn't work properly for me, eventually I accidentally did this and it works great, it works on chrome and safari (the only things I tested on). Replace the colour code thing with your background colour code and the text will be invisible. you can also adjust the font size to make the line break bigger or smaller depending on your desire. It is really simple.