y
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since January 2020.
The y
CSS property defines the y-axis coordinate of the top left corner of the SVG <rect>
shape, <image>
image, <foreignObject>
viewport and nested <svg>
viewport relative to the nearest <svg>
ancestor's user coordinate system. If present, it overrides the element's y
attribute.
Note: The y
property only applies to <rect>
, <image>
, <foreignObject>
, and <svg>
elements nested in an <svg>
. It has no effect on outermost <svg>
elements and does not apply to other SVG elements nor to HTML elements or pseudo-elements.
Syntax
/* length and percentage values */
y: 10px;
y: 10%;
/* Global values */
y: inherit;
y: initial;
y: revert;
y: revert-layer;
y: unset;
Values
The <length>
and <percentage>
values denote the y-axis coordinate position of the top left corner of the SVG element.
<length>
-
As an absolute or relative length, it can be expressed in any unit allowed by the CSS
<length>
data type. <percentage>
-
Percentages refer to the height of the SVG
viewBox
, if declared, otherwise, the percentage refers to the height of the current SVG viewport.
Formal definition
Initial value | 0 |
---|---|
Applies to | <svg> , <rect> , <image> , and <foreignobject> elements in <svg> |
Inherited | no |
Percentages | refer to the height of the current SVG viewport |
Computed value | the percentage as specified or the absolute length |
Animation type | by computed value type |
Formal syntax
y =
<length-percentage>
<length-percentage> =
<length> |
<percentage>
Examples
Defining the y-axis coordinates of SVG shapes
This example demonstrates the basic use case of y
, and how the CSS y
property takes precedence over the y
attribute.
HTML
We include four identical SVG <rect>
elements; their x
and y
attributes values are all 10
, meaning the four rectangles are all in the same location, 10px
from the top and left corner of the SVG viewport.
<svg>
<rect width="40" height="40" x="10" y="10" />
<rect width="40" height="40" x="10" y="10" />
<rect width="40" height="40" x="10" y="10" />
<rect width="40" height="40" x="10" y="10" />
</svg>
CSS
We style all the rectangles to have a black border and be slightly transparent, so overlapping rectangles are visible. We provide the rectangle with different fill
and y
values.
svg {
border: 1px solid;
}
rect {
fill: none;
stroke: black;
opacity: 0.8;
}
rect:nth-of-type(2) {
y: -20px;
fill: red;
}
rect:nth-of-type(3) {
y: 4em;
fill: yellow;
}
rect:nth-of-type(4) {
y: 60%;
fill: orange;
}
Results
The top edges of the rectangles are at 10
(from the attribute), -20px
, 4em
, and 60%
, respectively. The rectangle is 40px
tall, so the -20px
places half the red rectangle outside the viewport. The SVG is 150px
tall, so the orange rectangle's top side is 90px
from the top of the SVG viewport.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 2 # Y |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser