margin-trim
Limited availability
This feature is not Baseline because it does not work in some of the most widely-used browsers.
Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The margin-trim
property allows the container to trim the margins of its children where they adjoin the container's edges.
Syntax
margin-trim: none;
margin-trim: block;
margin-trim: block-start;
margin-trim: block-end;
margin-trim: inline;
margin-trim: inline-start;
margin-trim: inline-end;
/* Global values */
margin-trim: inherit;
margin-trim: initial;
margin-trim: revert;
margin-trim: revert-layer;
margin-trim: unset;
Values
none
Margins are not trimmed by the container.
block
Margins provided to the block children where they adjoin the container's edges are trimmed to zero without affecting the margins provided to the container.
block-start
Margin of the first block child with the container's edge is trimmed to zero.
block-end
Margin of last block child with the container's edge is trimmed to zero.
inline
Margins provided to the inline children where they adjoin the container's edges are trimmed to zero, without affecting the spacing at the beginning and end of the row.
inline-start
Margin between the container's edge and the first inline child is trimmed to zero.
inline-end
Margin between the container's edge and the last inline child is trimmed to zero.
Formal definition
Initial value | none |
---|---|
Applies to | Block containers and multi-column containers. It also applies to ::first-letter . |
Inherited | no |
Computed value | as specified |
Animation type | discrete |
Formal syntax
Examples
Basic usage
Once support is implemented for this property, it will probably work like so:
When you've got a container with some inline children and you want to put a margin between each child but not have it interfere with the spacing at the end of the row, you might do something like this:
article {
background-color: red;
margin: 20px;
padding: 20px;
display: inline-block;
}
article > span {
background-color: black;
color: white;
text-align: center;
padding: 10px;
margin-right: 20px;
margin-left: 30px;
}
The problem here is that you'd end up with 20px too much spacing at the right of the row, so you'd maybe do this to fix it:
span:last-child {
margin-right: 0;
margin-left: 0;
}
It is a pain having to write another rule to achieve this, and it is also not very flexible. Instead, margin-trim
could fix it:
article {
margin-trim: inline-end;
/* … */
}
Similarly, to remove left margin with the container's edge:
article {
margin-trim: inline-start;
/* … */
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Box Model Module Level 4 # margin-trim |