direction
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 direction
attribute specifies the inline-base direction of a <text>
or <tspan>
element. It defines the start and end points of a line of text as used by the text-anchor
and inline-size
properties. It also may affect the direction in which characters are positioned if the unicode-bidi
property's value is either embed
or bidi-override
.
It applies only to glyphs oriented perpendicular to the inline-base direction, which includes the usual case of horizontally-oriented Latin or Arabic text and the case of narrow-cell Latin or Arabic characters rotated 90 degrees clockwise relative to a top-to-bottom inline-base direction.
In many cases, the bidirectional Unicode algorithm produces the desired result automatically, so this attribute doesn't need to be specified in those cases. For other cases, such as when using right-to-left languages, it may be sufficient to add the direction
attribute to the outermost <svg>
element, and allow that direction to inherit to all text elements:
Note:
As a presentation attribute, direction
can be used as a CSS property. See CSS direction
for further information.
You can use this attribute with the following SVG elements:
Example
<svg
viewBox="0 0 600 72"
xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"
direction="rtl"
lang="fa">
<text x="300" y="50" text-anchor="middle" font-size="36">
داستان SVG 1.1 SE طولا ني است.
</text>
</svg>
Usage notes
Value | ltr | rtl |
---|---|
Default value | ltr |
Animatable | Yes |
Specifications
Specification |
---|
CSS Writing Modes Level 4 # direction |
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 2 # DirectionProperty |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser