cx
The cx
CSS property defines the x-axis center point of an SVG <circle>
or <ellipse>
element. If present, it overrides the element's cx
attribute.
Note: While SVG the cx
attribute is relevant to the SVG <radialGradient>
element, the cx
property only applies to <circle>
and <ellipse>
elements nested in an <svg>
. It doesn't apply to <radialGradient>
or other SVG elements nor to HTML elements or pseudo-elements.
Syntax
/* length and percentage values */
cx: 20px;
cx: 20%;
/* Global values */
cx: inherit;
cx: initial;
cx: revert;
cx: revert-layer;
cx: unset;
Values
The <length>
and <percentage>
values denote the horizontal center of the circle or ellipse.
<length>
-
As an absolute or relative length, it can be expressed in any unit allowed by the CSS
<length>
data type. Negative values are invalid. <percentage>
-
Percentages refer to the width of the current SVG viewport.
Formal definition
Formal syntax
cx =
<length-percentage>
<length-percentage> =
<length> |
<percentage>
Examples
Defining the x-axis coordinate of a circle and ellipse
This example demonstrates the basic use case of cx
, and how the CSS cx
property takes precedence over the cx
attribute.
HTML
We include two identical <circle>
and two identical <ellipse>
elements in an SVG; their cx
attribute values are 50
and 150
, respectively.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="30" />
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="30" />
<ellipse cx="150" cy="50" rx="20" ry="40" />
<ellipse cx="150" cy="50" rx="20" ry="40" />
</svg>
CSS
With CSS, we style only the first circle and first ellipse, allowing their twin shapes to use default styles (with (fill
defaulting to black). We use the cx
property to override the value of the SVG cx
attribute and also give it a fill
and stroke
to differentiate the first shapes in each pair from their twin. The browser renders SVG images as 300px
wide and 150px
tall by default.
svg {
border: 1px solid;
}
circle:first-of-type {
cx: 30px;
fill: lightgreen;
stroke: black;
}
ellipse:first-of-type {
cx: 180px;
fill: pink;
stroke: black;
}
Results
The style circle's center is 30px
from the left edge of the SVG viewport and the styled ellipse is 180px
from that edge, as defined in the CSS cx
property values. The unstyled shapes centers are 50px
and 150px
from the left edge of the SVG viewport, as defined in their SVG cx
attribute values.
x-axis coordinates as percentage values
This example demonstrates using percentage values for cx
.
HTML
We use the same markup as the previous example.
<svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="30" />
<circle cx="50" cy="50" r="30" />
<ellipse cx="150" cy="50" rx="20" ry="40" />
<ellipse cx="150" cy="50" rx="20" ry="40" />
</svg>
CSS
We use CSS which is similar to the previous example. The only difference is the CSS cx
property value; in this case, we use percentage values of 30%
for the <circle>
and 80%
for the <ellipse>
.
svg {
border: 1px solid;
}
circle:first-of-type {
cx: 30%;
fill: lightgreen;
stroke: black;
}
ellipse:first-of-type {
cx: 80%;
fill: pink;
stroke: black;
}
Results
When using percentage values for cx
, the values are relative to the width of the SVG viewport. Here, the x-axis coordinates of the center of the style circle and ellipse are 30%
and 80%
, respectively, of the width of the current SVG viewport. As the width defaulted to 300px
, the cx
values are 90px
and 240px
from the SVG viewport's left edge.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 2 # CX |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser
See also
- SVG
cx
attribute - Geometry properties:
cx
,cy
,r
,rx
,ry
,x
,y
,width
,height
fill
stroke
paint-order
border-radius
shorthand propertyradial-gradient
<basic-shape>
data type