stroke-linecap
The stroke-linecap
CSS property defines the shape to be used at the end of open subpaths of SVG elements' unclosed strokes. If present, it overrides the element's stroke-linecap
attribute.
This property applies to any SVG shape that can have unclosed strokes and text-content element (see stroke-linecap
for a full list), but as an inherited property, it may be applied to elements such as <g>
and still have the intended effect on descendant elements' strokes.
Syntax
/* keyword values */
stroke-linecap: butt;
stroke-linecap: round;
stroke-linecap: square;
/* Global values */
stroke-linecap: inherit;
stroke-linecap: initial;
stroke-linecap: revert;
stroke-linecap: revert-layer;
stroke-linecap: unset;
Values
butt
-
Indicates that the stroke for each subpath does not extend beyond its two endpoints. On a zero-length subpath, the path will not be rendered at all. This is the default value.
round
-
Indicates that at the end of each subpath the stroke will be extended by a half circle with a diameter equal to the stroke width. On a zero-length subpath, the stroke consists of a full circle centered at the subpath's point.
square
-
Indicates that at the end of each subpath the stroke will be extended by a rectangle with a width equal to half the width of the stroke and a height equal to the width of the stroke. On a zero-length subpath, the stroke consists of a square with its width equal to the stroke width, centered at the subpath's point.
Formal definition
Formal syntax
Examples
Linecaps
This example demonstrates the property's three keyword values.
HTML
We first set up a light-gray rectangle. Then, in a group, three paths are defined whose length is exactly the same as the width of the rectangle, and all of which start at the left edge of the rectangle. They are all set to have a dodgerblue
stroke with a width of seven.
<svg viewBox="0 0 100 50" width="500" height="250">
<rect x="10" y="5" width="80" height="30" fill="#DDD" />
<g stroke="dodgerblue" stroke-width="7">
<path d="M 10,10 h 80" />
<path d="M 10,20 h 80" />
<path d="M 10,30 h 80" />
</g>
</svg>
CSS
We then apply a different linecap style to each path via CSS.
path:nth-of-type(1) {
stroke-linecap: butt;
}
path:nth-of-type(2) {
stroke-linecap: square;
}
path:nth-of-type(3) {
stroke-linecap: round;
}
Results
The first path has butt
linecaps, which essentially means the stroke runs exactly to the end points (both the start and the end) of the path, and no further. The second path has square
linecaps, so the visible path extends out past the end points of the path, making the overall length of the path appear to be 87, since the path length is 80 and each of the two square caps is 3.5 wide. The third path has circle
caps, so while it also appears to be 87 units long, the two caps are semicircular instead of square.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Fill and Stroke Module Level 3 # stroke-linecap |
Browser compatibility
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