clamp()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2020.
The clamp()
CSS function clamps a middle value within a range of values between a defined minimum bound and a maximum bound. The function takes three parameters: a minimum value, a preferred value, and a maximum allowed value.
Try it
Note that using clamp()
for font sizes, as in these examples, allows you to set a font-size that grows with the size of the viewport, but doesn't go below a minimum font-size or above a maximum font-size. It has the same effect as the code in Fluid Typography but in one line, and without the use of media queries.
Syntax
/* Static values */
width: clamp(200px, 40%, 400px);
width: clamp(20rem, 30vw, 70rem);
width: clamp(10vw, 20em, 100vw);
/* Calculated values */
width: clamp(min(10vw, 20rem), 300px, max(90vw, 55rem));
width: clamp(100px, calc(30% / 2rem + 10px), 900px);
Parameters
The clamp(min, val, max)
function accepts three comma-separated expressions as its parameters.
min
-
The minimum value is the smallest (most negative) value. This is the lower bound in the range of allowed values. If the preferred value is less than this value, the minimum value will be used.
val
-
The preferred value is the expression whose value will be used as long as the result is between the minimum and maximum values.
max
-
The maximum value is the largest (most positive) expression value to which the value of the property will be assigned if the preferred value is greater than this upper bound.
The expressions can be math functions (see calc()
for more information), literal values, other expressions that evaluate to a valid argument type (like <length>
), or nested min()
and max()
functions. For math expressions, you can use addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division without using the calc()
function itself. You may also use parentheses to establish computation order when needed.
You can use different units for each value in your expressions and different units in any math function making up any of the arguments.
Keep the following aspects in mind while working with the function:
- Math expressions involving percentages for widths and heights on table columns, table column groups, table rows, table row groups, and table cells in both auto and fixed layout tables may be treated as if
auto
had been specified. - It is permitted to nest
max()
andmin()
functions as expression values, in which case the inner ones are treated as simple parentheses. The expressions are full math expressions, so you can use direct addition, subtraction, multiplication and division without using the calc() function itself. - The expression can be values combining the addition (
+
), subtraction (-
), multiplication (*
) and division (/
) operators, using standard operator precedence rules. Make sure to put a space on each side of the+
and-
operands. The operands in the expression may be any<length>
syntax value. You can use different units for each value in your expression. You may also use parentheses to establish computation order when needed. - Oftentimes you will want to use
min()
andmax()
within aclamp()
function.
Return value
clamp(MIN, VAL, MAX)
is resolved as
.max
(MIN, min
(VAL, MAX))
Based on the provided parameters, the function returns <length>
, <frequency>
, <angle>
, <time>
, <percentage>
, <number>
, or <integer>
.
Formal syntax
<clamp()> =
clamp( [ <calc-sum> | none ] , <calc-sum> , [ <calc-sum> | none ] )
<calc-sum> =
<calc-product> [ [ '+' | '-' ] <calc-product> ]*
<calc-product> =
<calc-value> [ [ '*' | '/' ] <calc-value> ]*
<calc-value> =
<number> |
<dimension> |
<percentage> |
<calc-keyword> |
( <calc-sum> )
<calc-keyword> =
e |
pi |
infinity |
-infinity |
NaN
Examples
min(), max(), and clamp() comparison
In this example we have a web page that uses min()
, max()
, and clamp()
to set sizes responsively.
The example adjusts the sizes of page elements in three ways:
- the lengths of the lines of text
- the font size of paragraph text
- the font size of heading text
In all three cases, the page uses a combination of a viewport-relative units (vw
and <percentage>
), to set a size that varies with the viewport width, and a value that is not viewport relative (rem
and px
) to implement minimum and/or maximum sizes.
The example is at https://mdn.github.io/css-examples/min-max-clamp/. Open it in a new window and try adjusting the window width.
The line length (controlled by the width
of the <body>
element) will increase as the window width increases, but only up to a certain point (1000px
), and beyond that point, it won't increase anymore. We're using min()
to set a maximum line length: it can go under 1000px
, but won't go over. This is helpful because long lines are harder to read, so we often want to limit how long a line can be. To achieve this we use min(1000px, calc(70% + 100px))
: when the result of the percentage-based calculation goes above 1000px
, we switch to the fixed 1000px
value.
The size of the paragraph text, controlled by the font-size
of the <p>
element, decreases as the window gets narrower, but only up to a certain point, and beyond that point (the point where 1.2vw
is less than 1.2rem
) it doesn't get any smaller: it stays at 1.2rem
. We're using max()
to set a minimum font size: the font can grow above 1.2rem
but will never go below it. This is helpful because really small text is hard to read. To achieve this we use max(1.2rem, 1.2vw)
. This means that the font-size
will be set at 1.2rem
, unless the computed value of 1.2vw
is greater than that of 1.2rem
, in which case it will be set to 1.2vw
instead.
The size of the heading text, controlled by the font-size
of the <h1>
element, has a viewport-relative value with both a maximum and a minimum threshold. To achieve this we use clamp(1.8rem, 2.5vw, 2.8rem)
. The viewport-relative value is 2.5vw
but it is clamped between 1.8rem
and 2.8rem
, so:
- if the calculated value of
2.5vw
is less than1.8rem
, then1.8rem
will be used - if the calculated value of
2.5vw
is greater than2.8rem
, then2.8rem
will be used.
This prevents the heading text from getting too small in a very narrow window, or too big in a very wide window.
HTML
<h1>Simple responsive test</h1>
<p>
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. In orci orci,
eleifend id risus nec, mattis rutrum velit. Suspendisse fringilla egestas erat
eu convallis. Phasellus eu velit ut magna dapibus elementum cursus at ligula.
Ut tempus varius nibh, nec auctor sapien iaculis sit amet. Fusce iaculis,
libero quis elementum viverra, nulla ante accumsan lectus, sit amet convallis
lacus ipsum vel est. Curabitur et urna non est consectetur pulvinar vel id
risus. Ut vestibulum, sem in semper aliquet, felis arcu euismod sapien, ac
imperdiet massa nisl quis sem. Vestibulum ac elementum felis, in tempor velit.
Pellentesque purus ex, mattis at ornare quis, porta condimentum mi. Donec
vestibulum ligula vel nulla blandit, quis euismod nulla vestibulum.
Suspendisse potenti. Nunc neque mauris, tempor sed facilisis at, ultrices eget
nulla. Pellentesque convallis ante nec augue porttitor, id tempus ante luctus.
</p>
<p>
Integer rutrum sollicitudin tellus, quis cursus nulla scelerisque nec. Nunc eu
facilisis lorem. Maecenas faucibus sapien eleifend, semper tellus at, pharetra
quam. Cras feugiat vulputate tortor at rhoncus. Class aptent taciti sociosqu
ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos himenaeos. Nam non felis
quis sem lobortis sodales vel id libero. Phasellus sit amet placerat lorem.
</p>
CSS
html {
font-family: sans-serif;
}
body {
margin: 0 auto;
width: min(1000px, calc(70% + 100px));
}
h1 {
letter-spacing: 2px;
font-size: clamp(1.8rem, 2.5vw, 2.8rem);
}
p {
line-height: 1.5;
font-size: max(1.2rem, 1.2vw);
}
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Values and Units Module Level 4 # calc-notation |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser