- font-style
- Try it
- Syntax
- Values
- Variable fonts
- Accessibility concerns
- Formal definition
- Formal syntax
- Examples
- Font styles
- Specifications
- Browser compatibility
- See also
- Found a content problem with this page?
- MDN
- Support
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- Fundamental text and font styling
- What is involved in styling text in CSS?
- Fonts
- Color
- Font families
- Web safe fonts
- Default fonts
font-style
The font-style CSS property sets whether a font should be styled with a normal, italic, or oblique face from its font-family .
Try it
Italic font faces are generally cursive in nature, usually using less horizontal space than their unstyled counterparts, while oblique faces are usually just sloped versions of the regular face. When the specified style is not available, both italic and oblique faces are simulated by artificially sloping the glyphs of the regular face (use font-synthesis to control this behavior).
Syntax
font-style: normal; font-style: italic; font-style: oblique; font-style: oblique 10deg; /* Global values */ font-style: inherit; font-style: initial; font-style: revert; font-style: revert-layer; font-style: unset;
The font-style property is specified as a single keyword chosen from the list of values below, which can optionally include an angle if the keyword is oblique .
Values
Selects a font that is classified as normal within a font-family .
Selects a font that is classified as italic . If no italic version of the face is available, one classified as oblique is used instead. If neither is available, the style is artificially simulated.
Selects a font that is classified as oblique . If no oblique version of the face is available, one classified as italic is used instead. If neither is available, the style is artificially simulated.
Selects a font classified as oblique , and additionally specifies an angle for the slant of the text. If one or more oblique faces are available in the chosen font family, the one that most closely matches the specified angle is chosen. If no oblique faces are available, the browser will synthesize an oblique version of the font by slanting a normal face by the specified amount. Valid values are degree values of -90deg to 90deg inclusive. If an angle is not specified, an angle of 14 degrees is used. Positive values are slanted to the end of the line, while negative values are slanted towards the beginning.
In general, for a requested angle of 14 degrees or greater, larger angles are preferred; otherwise, smaller angles are preferred (see the spec’s font matching section for the precise algorithm).
Variable fonts
Variable fonts can offer a fine control over the degree to which an oblique face is slanted. You can select this using the modifier for the oblique keyword.
For TrueType or OpenType variable fonts, the «slnt» variation is used to implement varying slant angles for oblique, and the «ital» variation with a value of 1 is used to implement italic values. See font-variation-settings .
Note: For the example below to work, you’ll need a browser that supports the CSS Fonts Level 4 syntax in which font-style: oblique can accept an . The demo loads with font-style: oblique 23deg; . Change the value to see the slant of the text change.
Accessibility concerns
Large sections of text set with a font-style value of italic may be difficult for people with cognitive concerns such as Dyslexia to read.
Formal definition
Initial value | normal |
---|---|
Applies to | all elements. It also applies to ::first-letter and ::first-line . |
Inherited | yes |
Computed value | as specified |
Animation type | by computed value type; normal animates as oblique 0deg |
Formal syntax
Examples
Font styles
p class="normal">This paragraph is normal.p> p class="italic">This paragraph is italic.p> p class="oblique">This paragraph is oblique.p>
.normal font-style: normal; > .italic font-style: italic; > .oblique font-style: oblique; >
Specifications
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
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This page was last modified on Feb 21, 2023 by MDN contributors.
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Fundamental text and font styling
In this article we’ll start you on your journey towards mastering text styling with CSS. Here we’ll go through all the basic fundamentals of text/font styling in detail, including setting font weight, family and style, font shorthand, text alignment and other effects, and line and letter spacing.
Prerequisites: | Basic computer literacy, HTML basics (study Introduction to HTML), CSS basics (study Introduction to CSS). |
---|---|
Objective: | To learn the fundamental properties and techniques needed to style text on web pages. |
What is involved in styling text in CSS?
If you have worked with HTML or CSS already, e.g., by working through these tutorials in order, then you know that text inside an element is laid out inside the element’s content box. It starts at the top left of the content area (or the top right, in the case of RTL language content), and flows towards the end of the line. Once it reaches the end, it goes down to the next line and flows to the end again. This pattern repeats until all the content has been placed in the box. Text content effectively behaves like a series of inline elements, being laid out on lines adjacent to one another, and not creating line breaks until the end of the line is reached, or unless you force a line break manually using the element.
Note: If the above paragraph leaves you feeling confused, then no matter — go back and review our Box model article to brush up on the box model theory before carrying on.
The CSS properties used to style text generally fall into two categories, which we’ll look at separately in this article:
- Font styles: Properties that affect a text’s font, e.g., which font gets applied, its size, and whether it’s bold, italic, etc.
- Text layout styles: Properties that affect the spacing and other layout features of the text, allowing manipulation of, for example, the space between lines and letters, and how the text is aligned within the content box.
Note: Bear in mind that the text inside an element is all affected as one single entity. You can’t select and style subsections of text unless you wrap them in an appropriate element (such as a or ), or use a text-specific pseudo-element like ::first-letter (selects the first letter of an element’s text), ::first-line (selects the first line of an element’s text), or ::selection (selects the text currently highlighted by the cursor).
Fonts
Let’s move straight on to look at properties for styling fonts. In this example, we’ll apply some CSS properties to the following HTML sample:
h1>Tommy the cath1> p>Well I remember it as though it were a meal ago…p> p> Said Tommy the Cat as he reeled back to clear whatever foreign matter may have nestled its way into his mighty throat. Many a fat alley rat had met its demise while staring point blank down the cavernous barrel of this awesome prowling machine. Truly a wonder of nature this urban predator — Tommy the cat had many a story to tell. But it was a rare occasion such as this that he did. p>
Color
The color property sets the color of the foreground content of the selected elements, which is usually the text, but can also include a couple of other things, such as an underline or overline placed on text using the text-decoration property.
color can accept any CSS color unit, for example:
This will cause the paragraphs to become red, rather than the standard browser default of black, like so:
h1>Tommy the cath1> p>Well I remember it as though it were a meal ago…p> p> Said Tommy the Cat as he reeled back to clear whatever foreign matter may have nestled its way into his mighty throat. Many a fat alley rat had met its demise while staring point blank down the cavernous barrel of this awesome prowling machine. Truly a wonder of nature this urban predator — Tommy the cat had many a story to tell. But it was a rare occasion such as this that he did. p>
Font families
To set a different font for your text, you use the font-family property — this allows you to specify a font (or list of fonts) for the browser to apply to the selected elements. The browser will only apply a font if it is available on the machine the website is being accessed on; if not, it will just use a browser default font. A simple example looks like so:
This would make all paragraphs on a page adopt the arial font, which is found on any computer.
Web safe fonts
Speaking of font availability, there are only a certain number of fonts that are generally available across all systems and can therefore be used without much worry. These are the so-called web safe fonts.
Most of the time, as web developers we want to have more specific control over the fonts used to display our text content. The problem is to find a way to know which font is available on the computer used to see our web pages. There is no way to know this in every case, but the web safe fonts are known to be available on nearly all instances of the most used operating systems (Windows, macOS, the most common Linux distributions, Android, and iOS).
The list of actual web safe fonts will change as operating systems evolve, but it’s reasonable to consider the following fonts web safe, at least for now (many of them have been popularized thanks to the Microsoft Core fonts for the Web initiative in the late 90s and early 2000s):
Name | Generic type | Notes |
---|---|---|
Arial | sans-serif | It’s often considered best practice to also add Helvetica as a preferred alternative to Arial as, although their font faces are almost identical, Helvetica is considered to have a nicer shape, even if Arial is more broadly available. |
Courier New | monospace | Some OSes have an alternative (possibly older) version of the Courier New font called Courier. It’s considered best practice to use both with Courier New as the preferred alternative. |
Georgia | serif | |
Times New Roman | serif | Some OSes have an alternative (possibly older) version of the Times New Roman font called Times. It’s considered best practice to use both with Times New Roman as the preferred alternative. |
Trebuchet MS | sans-serif | You should be careful with using this font — it isn’t widely available on mobile OSes. |
Verdana | sans-serif |
Note: Among various resources, the cssfontstack.com website maintains a list of web safe fonts available on Windows and macOS operating systems, which can help you make your decision about what you consider safe for your usage.
Note: There is a way to download a custom font along with a webpage, to allow you to customize your font usage in any way you want: web fonts. This is a little bit more complex, and we will discuss it in a separate article later on in the module.
Default fonts
CSS defines five generic names for fonts: serif , sans-serif , monospace , cursive , and fantasy . These are very generic and the exact font face used from these generic names can vary between each browser and each operating system that they are displayed on. It represents a worst case scenario where the browser will try its best to provide a font that looks appropriate. serif , sans-serif , and monospace are quite predictable and should provide something reasonable. On the other hand, cursive and fantasy are less predictable and we recommend using them very carefully, testing as you go.
The five names are defined as follows:
body font-family: sans-serif; >