hyphenate-character
        
        
          
                Baseline
                
                  2023
                
                
              
        
        Newly available
        
          
                
              
                
              
                
              
        
        
      
      Since September 2023, this feature works across the latest devices and browser versions. This feature might not work in older devices or browsers.
The hyphenate-character CSS property sets the character (or string) used at the end of a line before a hyphenation break.
Both automatic and soft hyphens are displayed according to the specified hyphenate-character value.
Try it
hyphenate-character: auto;
hyphenate-character: "=";
hyphenate-character: "—";
<section id="default-example">
  <p id="example-element">An extraordinarily long English word!</p>
</section>
#example-element {
  border: 2px dashed #999999;
  font-size: 1.5rem;
  text-align: left;
  width: 7rem;
  hyphens: auto;
}
Syntax
hyphenate-character: <string>;
hyphenate-character: auto;
The value either sets the string to use instead of a hyphen, or indicates that the user agent should select an appropriate string based on the current typographic conventions (default).
Values
- <string>
- 
The <string>to use at the end of the line before a hyphenation break. The user agent may truncate this value if too many characters are used.
- auto
- 
The user-agent selects an appropriate string based on the content language's typographic conventions. This is the default property value, and only needs to be explicitly set in order to override a different inherited value. 
Formal definition
| Initial value | auto | 
|---|---|
| Applies to | all elements | 
| Inherited | yes | 
| Computed value | as specified | 
| Animation type | discrete | 
Formal syntax
hyphenate-character =
auto |
<string>
Examples
This example shows two identical blocks of text that have hyphens set to ensure that they break wherever needed, and on soft hyphen breaks (created using ­).
The first block has the value of the hyphen changed to the equals symbol (=).
The second block has no hyphenate-character set, which is equivalent to hyphenate-character: auto for user agents that support this property.
HTML
<dl>
  <dt><code>hyphenate-character: "="</code></dt>
  <dd id="string" lang="en">Superc­alifragilisticexpialidocious</dd>
  <dt><code>hyphenate-character is not set</code></dt>
  <dd lang="en">Superc­alifragilisticexpialidocious</dd>
</dl>
CSS
dd {
  width: 90px;
  border: 1px solid black;
  hyphens: auto;
}
dd#string {
  -webkit-hyphenate-character: "=";
  hyphenate-character: "=";
}
Result
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| CSS Text Module Level 4> # propdef-hyphenate-character> | 
Browser compatibility
Loading…
See also
- Related CSS properties: hyphens,overflow-wrap.