flex-basis
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since September 2015.
The flex-basis CSS property sets the initial main size of a flex item. It sets the size of the content box unless otherwise set with box-sizing.
Note:
It is recommended to use the flex shorthand with a keyword value like auto or initial instead of setting flex-basis on its own. The keyword values expand to reliable combinations of flex-grow, flex-shrink, and flex-basis, which help to achieve the commonly desired flex behaviors.
Try it
flex-basis: auto;
flex-basis: 0;
flex-basis: 200px;
<section class="default-example" id="default-example">
<div class="transition-all" id="example-element">Item One</div>
<div>Item Two</div>
<div>Item Three</div>
</section>
.default-example {
border: 1px solid #c5c5c5;
width: auto;
max-height: 300px;
display: flex;
}
.default-example > div {
background-color: rgb(0 0 255 / 0.2);
border: 3px solid blue;
margin: 10px;
flex-grow: 1;
flex-shrink: 1;
flex-basis: auto;
}
In this example, the flex-grow and flex-shrink properties are both set to 1 on all three items, indicating that the flex item can grow and shrink from the initial flex-basis.
The demo changes the flex-basis value set on the first flex item, causing it to grow or shrink to fill the available space. The other flex items will also change size; they will be at least min-content-sized. For example, when the flex-basis of the first item is set to 200px, it will start at 200px but then shrink to fit the space available.
If flex-basis is set to a value other than auto and there is a width (or height in case of flex-direction: column) set for that same flex item, the flex-basis value takes precedence.
Syntax
/* Specify <'width'> */
flex-basis: 10em;
flex-basis: 3px;
flex-basis: 50%;
flex-basis: auto;
/* Intrinsic sizing keywords */
flex-basis: max-content;
flex-basis: min-content;
flex-basis: fit-content;
/* Automatically size based on the flex item's content */
flex-basis: content;
/* Global values */
flex-basis: inherit;
flex-basis: initial;
flex-basis: revert;
flex-basis: revert-layer;
flex-basis: unset;
The flex-basis property is specified as either the keyword content or a <'width'>.
Values
content-
Indicates automatic sizing, based on the flex item's content.
<'width'>-
Any of the following units:
<length>sets an absolute value.<percentage>sets a percentage of the width or height of the containing block's content area. Percentage values offlex-basisare resolved against the flex container. If the flex container's size is indefinite, the used value forflex-basisiscontent.autouses the value of thewidthin horizontal writing mode, and the value of theheightin vertical writing mode; when the corresponding value is alsoauto, thecontentvalue is used instead.max-contentsets the intrinsic preferred width.min-contentsets the intrinsic minimum width.fit-contentsets the maximum possible size of a containing block's content area, bounded by themin-contentandmax-contentvalues, and calculated based on the content of the current element.
Formal definition
| Initial value | auto |
|---|---|
| Applies to | flex items, including in-flow pseudo-elements |
| Inherited | no |
| Percentages | refer to the flex container's inner main size |
| Computed value | as specified, but with relative lengths converted into absolute lengths |
| Animation type | a length, percentage or calc(); |
Formal syntax
flex-basis =
content |
<'width'>
<width> =
auto |
<length-percentage [0,∞]> |
min-content |
max-content |
fit-content( <length-percentage [0,∞]> ) |
<calc-size()> |
<anchor-size()> |
stretch |
fit-content |
contain
<length-percentage> =
<length> |
<percentage>
<calc-size()> =
calc-size( <calc-size-basis> , <calc-sum> )
<anchor-size()> =
anchor-size( [ <anchor-name> || <anchor-size> ]? , <length-percentage>? )
<calc-size-basis> =
<size-keyword> |
<calc-size()> |
any |
<calc-sum>
<calc-sum> =
<calc-product> [ [ '+' | '-' ] <calc-product> ]*
<anchor-name> =
<dashed-ident>
<anchor-size> =
width |
height |
block |
inline |
self-block |
self-inline
<calc-product> =
<calc-value> [ [ '*' | / ] <calc-value> ]*
<calc-value> =
<number> |
<dimension> |
<percentage> |
<calc-keyword> |
( <calc-sum> )
<calc-keyword> =
e |
pi |
infinity |
-infinity |
NaN
Examples
>Setting flex item initial sizes
HTML
<ul class="container">
<li class="flex flex1">1: flex-basis test</li>
<li class="flex flex2">2: flex-basis test</li>
<li class="flex flex3">3: flex-basis test</li>
<li class="flex flex4">4: flex-basis test</li>
<li class="flex flex5">5: flex-basis test</li>
</ul>
<ul class="container">
<li class="flex flex6">6: flex-basis test</li>
</ul>
CSS
.container {
font-family: "Arial", sans-serif;
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
list-style-type: none;
display: flex;
flex-wrap: wrap;
}
.flex {
background: #6ab6d8;
padding: 10px;
margin-bottom: 50px;
border: 3px solid #2e86bb;
color: white;
font-size: 14px;
text-align: center;
position: relative;
}
.flex::after {
position: absolute;
z-index: 1;
left: 0;
top: 100%;
margin-top: 10px;
width: 100%;
color: #333333;
font-size: 12px;
}
.flex1 {
flex-basis: auto;
}
.flex1::after {
content: "auto";
}
.flex2 {
flex-basis: max-content;
}
.flex2::after {
content: "max-content";
}
.flex3 {
flex-basis: min-content;
}
.flex3::after {
content: "min-content";
}
.flex4 {
flex-basis: fit-content;
}
.flex4::after {
content: "fit-content";
}
.flex5 {
flex-basis: content;
}
.flex5::after {
content: "content";
}
Results
Flex basis 0 vs 0%
This example demonstrates the difference between a flex-basis of 0 versus a flex-basis of 0% when flex-direction is set to column and the flex containers and flex items don't have a set height; while 0 is an absolute length, percentage flex-basis values resolve to content values.
HTML
We include two same-structure flex containers, which will be styled similarly except for their flex-basis values. The containers each have two children: a heading <div> and a <section>. The <section> element has a content <div> child, which will not be set as a flex item but will be given a height.
<div class="container basis-0">
<div>heading</div>
<section>
flex-basis: 0;
<div class="content"></div>
</section>
</div>
<div class="container basis-0-percent">
<div>heading</div>
<section>
flex-basis: 0%;
<div class="content"></div>
</section>
</div>
CSS
We style the containers as inline flex containers that will appear side by side to better enable comparing them. We set the flex-direction to column. The first container's flex items have a flex-basis value of 0, while the second container's flex items have a flex-basis value of 0%. Neither the flex containers nor their flex items have a height explicitly set, but the heights of section elements cannot exceed 200px and their children have a height of 300px.
.container {
width: 40vw;
padding: 1rem;
border: 1px dashed blue;
display: inline-flex;
flex-direction: column;
}
section {
border: 1px solid red;
overflow: auto;
min-height: 200px;
}
.content {
background: wheat;
height: 300px;
}
.container.basis-0 > * {
flex-basis: 0;
}
.container.basis-0-percent > * {
flex-basis: 0%;
}
Results
In the first container, with flex-basis: 0, the <section> element has an initial main size of zero, and it grows to the 200px height limit. In the second container, with flex-basis: 0%, the <section> element has an initial main size of 300px because, as the flex container doesn't have a set height, the percentage flex-basis values resolve to the content value.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| CSS Flexible Box Layout Module Level 1> # flex-basis-property> |
Browser compatibility
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