Read CSS: The Definitive Guide, 3rd Edition Online

Authors: Eric A. Meyer

Tags: #COMPUTERS / Web / Page Design

CSS: The Definitive Guide, 3rd Edition (28 page)

Inline Formatting

As we
discussed in
Chapter 6
, all elements have a
line-height
. This value greatly influences the
way inline elements are displayed, so let's give it due attention.

First, let's establish how the height of a line is determined. A line's height (or
the height of the line box) is determined by the height of its constituent elements
and other content, such as text. It's important to understand that
line-height
actually affects inline elements and other
inline content,
not
block-level elements—at least, not directly.
You can set a
line-height
value for a block-level
element, but the value will have visual impact only if it's applied to inline content
within that block-level element. Consider the following empty paragraph, for example:


Without content, the paragraph won't have anything to display—you won't see
anything. The fact that this paragraph has a
line-height
of any value—be it
0.25em
or
25in
—makes no difference without some content
to create a line box.

You can certainly set a
line-height
value for a
block-level element and apply that to all of the content within the block, whether or
not the content is contained in any inline
elements. In a
certain sense, then, each line of text contained within a block-level element is its
own inline element, whether or not it's surrounded by tags. If you like, picture a
fictional tag sequence like this:


This is a paragraph with a number of
lines of text which make up the
contents.


Even though the
line
tags don't actually exist,
the paragraph behaves as if they did—each line of text inherits styles from the
paragraph. Therefore, you only bother to create
line-height
rules for block-level elements so you don't have to explicitly
declare a
line-height
for all of their inline
elements, fictional or otherwise.

The fictional
line
element actually clarifies
the behavior that results from setting
line-height
on a block-level element. According to the CSS specification, declaring
line-height
on a block-level element sets a
minimum
line-box height for the content of that block-level
element. Thus, declaring
p.spacious {line-height:
24pt;}
means that the minimum height for each line box is 24 points.
Technically, content can inherit this line height only if an inline element does so.
Most text isn't contained by an inline element. Therefore, if you pretend that each
line is contained by the fictional
line
element,
the model works out very nicely.

Inline Nonreplaced Elements

Building
on your formatting knowledge, let's move on to the construction of lines containing
only nonreplaced
elements (or
anonymous text). Then, you'll begin to better understand the differences between
nonreplaced and replaced elements in inline layout.

Building the boxes

First, for an inline nonreplaced element or piece of anonymous text, the value
of
font-size
determines the height of
the content
area. If an inline element has a
font-size
of
15px
, then the content area's height is 15
pixels because all of the em boxes in the element are 15 pixels tall, as
illustrated in
Figure 7-30
.

Figure 7-30. em boxes determine content area height

The next thing to consider is the value of
line-height
for the element, and the difference between it and the
value of
font-size
. If an inline nonreplaced
element has a
font-size
of
15px
and a
line-height
of
21px
, the difference
is 6 pixels. The user agent splits the six pixels in half and applies half to the
top and half to the bottom of the content area, which yields the inline box. This
process is illustrated in
Figure 7-31
.

Figure 7-31. Content area plus leading equals inline box

Let's assume that the following is true:


This is text, some of which is emphasized, plus other text

which is strongly emphasized
and which is

larger than the surrounding text.


In this example, most of the text has a
font-size
of
12px
, while the text in
one inline nonreplaced element has a size of
24px
. However,
all
of the text has a
line-height
of
12px
since
line-height
is an
inherited property. Therefore, the
strong
element's
line-height
is also
12px
.

Thus, for each piece of text where both the
font-size
and
line-height
are
12px
, the content height does not change
(since the difference between
12px
and
12px
is zero), so the inline box is 12 pixels high.
For the
strong
text, however, the difference
between
line-height
and
font-size
is
-12px
. This is divided in half to determine the half-leading (
-6px
), and the half-leading is added to both the top
and bottom of the content height to arrive at an inline box. Since you're adding a
negative number in both cases, the inline box ends up being 12 pixels tall. The
12-pixel inline box is centered vertically within the 24-pixel content height of
the element, so the inline box is actually smaller than the content area.

So far, it sounds like you've done the same thing to each bit of text, and all
of the inline boxes are the same size, but that's not quite true. The inline boxes
in the second line, although they're the same size, don't actually line up because
the text is all baseline-aligned (see
Figure
7-32
).

Figure 7-32. Inline boxes within a line

Since inline boxes determine the height of the overall line box, their
placement with respect to one another is critical. The line box is defined as the
distance from the top of the highest inline box in the line to the bottom of the
lowest inline box, and the top of each line box butts up against the bottom of the
line box for the preceding line. The result displayed in
Figure 7-32
gives you the paragraph shown
in
Figure 7-33
.

Figure 7-33. Line boxes within a paragraph

Tip

As you can see in
Figure 7-33
,
the middle line is taller than the other two, but it still isn't big enough to
contain all of the text within it. The anonymous text's inline box determines
the bottom of the line box, while the top of the
strong
element's inline box sets the top of the line box. Because
that inline box's top is inside the element's content area, the contents of the
element spill outside the line box and actually overlap other line
boxes.
The result is that the lines of text look irregular. Later in the chapter,
we'll explore ways to cope with this behavior and methods for achieving
consistent baseline spacing.

Vertical
alignment

If you change the vertical alignment of the
inline boxes, the same height determination principles apply. Suppose that you
give the
strong
element a vertical alignment of
4px
:


This is text, some of which is emphasized, plus other text

that is strongly
emphasized
and that is

larger than the surrounding text.


That
small change raises the element four pixels, which pushes up both its content area
and its inline box. Because the
strong
element's inline box top was already the highest in the line, this change in
vertical alignment also pushes the top of the line box upward by four pixels, as
shown in
Figure 7-34
.

Figure 7-34. Vertical alignment affects line-box height

Let's consider another situation. Here, you have another inline
element in the same line as the
strong
text,
and its alignment is other than the
baseline:


this is text, some of which is emphasized, plus other text

that is strong
and tall and that is

larger than the surrounding text.


Now
you have the same result as in your earlier example, where the middle line box is
taller than the other line boxes. However, notice how the "tall" text is aligned
in
Figure 7-35
.

Figure 7-35. Aligning an inline element to the line box

In this case, the top of the "tall" text's inline box is aligned with
the top of the line box. Since the "tall" text has equal values for
font-size
and
line-height
, the content height and inline box are the same. However,
consider
this:


This is text, some of which is emphasized, plus other text

that is strong
and tall
and that is

larger than the surrounding text.


Since
the
line-height
for the "tall" text is less
than its
font-size
, the inline box for that
element is smaller than its content area. This fact changes the placement of the
text itself, since the top of its inline box must be aligned with the top of the
line box for its line. Thus, you get the result shown in
Figure 7-36
.

Figure 7-36. Text protruding from the line box (again)

On the other hand, you could set the "tall" text to have a
line-height
that is actually bigger than its
font-size
. For
example:


This is text, some of which is emphasized, plus other text

that is strong
and tall
and that is

larger than the surrounding text.


Since
you've given the "tall" text a
line-height
of
18px
, the difference between
line-height
and
font-size
is 6 pixels. The half-leading of 3 pixels is added to the
content area and results in an inline box that is 18 pixels tall. The top of this
inline box aligns with the top of the line box. Similarly, the value
bottom
will align the bottom of an inline element's
inline box with the bottom of the line box.

In the terms we've been
using in this chapter, the effects of the assorted keyword values of
vertical-align
are:

top

Aligns the top of the element's inline box with the top of the
containing line box.

bottom

Aligns the bottom of the element's inline box with the bottom of the
containing line box.

text-top

Aligns the top of the element's inline box with the top of the
parent's content area.

text-bottom

Aligns the bottom of the element's inline box with the bottom of the
parent's content area.

middle

Aligns the vertical midpoint of the element's inline box with a point
one-half ex above the baseline of the parent.

super

Moves the content area and inline box of the element upward. The
distance is not specified and may vary by user agent.

sub

The same as
super
, except the
element is moved downward instead of upward.


Shifts the element up or down the distance defined by taking the
declared percentage of the element's value for
line-height
.

These values are explained in more detail in
Chapter 6
.

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