caret-animation
Experimental: This is an experimental technology
Check the Browser compatibility table carefully before using this in production.
The caret-animation CSS property is used to enable or disable the blinking behavior of the insertion caret, the visible marker that appears in editable elements to indicate where the next character will be inserted or deleted.
When applying a custom animation to the caret, you should stop the default blinking so that it doesn't interfere with the animation.
Syntax
/* Keyword values */
caret-animation: auto;
caret-animation: manual;
/* Global values */
caret-animation: inherit;
caret-animation: initial;
caret-animation: revert;
caret-animation: revert-layer;
caret-animation: unset;
Values
The caret-animation property is specified as one of the keyword values listed below.
Formal definition
Value not found in DB!Formal syntax
caret-animation =
auto |
manual
Examples
>Basic caret-animation usage
This example shows the difference between having caret-animation set to auto versus manual on an editable element.
HTML
The markup features two <p> elements with contenteditable set to make them editable.
<p contenteditable="true">
My caret animates because <code>caret-animation</code> is set to
<code>auto</code>.
</p>
<p contenteditable="true">
My caret doesn't animate because <code>caret-animation</code> is set to
<code>manual</code>.
</p>
CSS
The CSS sets the caret-color value to red. It then gives the first paragraph a caret-animation value of auto and the second paragraph a caret-animation value of manual.
p {
caret-color: red;
}
p:first-of-type {
caret-animation: auto;
}
p:last-of-type {
caret-animation: manual;
}
Result
The rendered result looks like so:
Try focusing the two paragraphs to see the difference in caret behavior.
Creating a custom caret animation
In this example, a custom caret animation is applied to an editable paragraph and a text input.
HTML
The markup features a <p> element and two text <input> elements. The <p> element has the contenteditable attribute set on it to make it editable. The paragraph and first text input have a class of custom-caret set on them.
<p contenteditable="true" class="custom-caret">
This paragraph has a custom animation applied to it, plus
<code>caret-animation: manual</code> to stop the default caret blinking and
allow the smooth animation to be seen.
</p>
<input
type="text"
class="custom-caret"
value="I've got a custom caret animation" />
<input type="text" value="I've got the default blinking caret" />
CSS
We first define a set of @keyframes that change the caret-color from transparent to darkblue.
@keyframes custom-caret-animation {
from {
caret-color: transparent;
}
to {
caret-color: darkblue;
}
}
We then style the <p> and the first <input> with the custom @keyframes animation, a caret-color, and a caret-animation value of manual to turn the default caret blinking behavior off.
.custom-caret {
animation: custom-caret-animation infinite linear alternate 0.75s;
caret-color: darkblue;
caret-animation: manual;
}
p,
input {
font-size: 1.6rem;
}
Result
The rendered result looks like so:
Try focusing the first two elements to see what the custom caret animation looks like. To compare it with the default blinking caret, you can focus the third element.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| CSS Basic User Interface Module Level 4> # propdef-caret-animation> |
Browser compatibility
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See also
caret-color,caret-shapecaretshorthand- CSS basic user interface module