lang
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 lang
attribute specifies the primary language used in contents and attributes containing text content of particular elements.
There is also an xml:lang
attribute (with namespace). If both of them are defined, the one with namespace is used and the one without is ignored.
In SVG 1.1 there was a lang
attribute defined with a different meaning and only applying to <glyph>
elements. That attribute specified a list of languages according to RFC 5646: Tags for Identifying Languages (also known as BCP 47). The glyph was meant to be used if the xml:lang
attribute exactly matched one of the languages given in the value of this parameter, or if the xml:lang
attribute exactly equaled a prefix of one of the languages given in the value of this parameter such that the first tag character following the prefix was "-".
You can use this attribute with any SVG element.
Example
<svg viewBox="0 0 200 100" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<text lang="en-US">This is some English text</text>
</svg>
Usage notes
Value | <language-tag> |
---|---|
Default value | None |
Animatable | No |
<language-tag>
-
This value specifies the language used for the element. The syntax of this value is defined in RFC 5646: Tags for Identifying Languages (also known as BCP 47).
The most common syntax is a value formed by a lowercase two-character part for the language and an uppercase two-character part for the region or country, separated by a minus sign, e.g.
en-US
for US English orde-AT
for Austrian German.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 2 # LangSpaceAttrs |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser