Template:Radial-gradient/doc
This is a documentation subpage for Template:Radial-gradient (see that page for the template itself). It contains usage information, categories and other content that is not part of the original template page. |
This template creates a radial gradient background. This currently works in Firefox (3.6 and up), Opera (12.0 and up), Safari (5.1 and up), Google Chrome (10 and up) and Internet Explorer 10.
Usage[edit source]
Use within a CSS style tag. The template uses the background-image property.
<div style="{{radial-gradient | position | shape [size] | #color [stop], #color [stop][, #color [stop], ...] }}">Lorem ipsum...</div>
- position – Mandatrory. Specify the X and Y position of the center of the gradient. This can be any valid CSS position value.
- shape – Mandatory. Specify the shape of the gradient using keywords or CSS size values. Valid keywords are:
- ellipse
- circle
- size – Optional. Specify the size of the radial using keywords or CSS size values.note 1 Valid keywords are:
- farthest-corner (or cover); Extends the radial to the farthest element corner, ensuring the gradient covers the entire element. This is the default.
- closest-corner; Extends the radial to the closest corner.
- farthest-side; Extends the radial to the farthest edge.
- closest-side (or contain); Extends the radial to the closest edge, ensuring the gradient does not extend beyond the element's borders.
- color – The first two colors are mandatory. You can define any number of additional colors, separated with commas.
- stop – Optional. You can specify a stop position for each color using a percentage (e.g. 45%) or pixels (e.g. 60px).
^note 1: Firefox does not yet support explicit size values, only keywords.
Technical notes[edit source]
The template does not assign a default background-color, and therefor does not provide an automatic fallback for browsers that do not support gradients. To provide a fallback, always specify a background color in front of the template.
This template uses the new CSS3 properties for radial gradients: -moz-radial-gradient, -ms-radial-gradient, -o-radial-gradient, -webkit-radial-gradient and radial-gradient.
Examples[edit source]
- <div style="{{radial-gradient|100px center|ellipse cover|#ffdddd, #ddddff}}">Lorem ipsum...</div> will produce
- <div style="{{radial-gradient|center|ellipse contain|#ffdddd, #ddffdd 50%, #ddddff}}">Lorem ipsum...</div> will produce
- <div style="{{radial-gradient|top|circle|#ffdddd, #ddddff}}">Lorem ipsum...</div> will produce
Considerations[edit source]
Above examples use contrasting colors to show the effect more clearly. It is best to use subtle differences in color to enhance the appearance, rather than radically change it. This also minimizes the effects between browsers that do and do not support gradients.
See also[edit source]
- {{linear-gradient}}
- {{border-radius}}
- {{box-shadow}}