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Summary

The flex-direction CSS property specifies how flex items are placed in the flex container defining the main axis and the direction (normal or reversed).

Note that the value row and row-reverse are affected by the directionality of the flex container. If its dir attribute is ltr, row represents the horizontal axis oriented from the left to the right, and row-reverse from the right to the left; if the dir attribute is rtl, row represents the axis oriented from the right to the left, and row-reverse from the left to the right.

Initial valuerow
Applies toflex containers
Inheritedno
Mediavisual
Computed valueas specified
Animatableno
Canonical orderthe unique non-ambiguous order defined by the formal grammar

See Using CSS flexible boxes for more properties and information.

Syntax

/* The direction text is laid out in a line */
flex-direction: row;

/* Like <row>, but reversed */
flex-direction: row-reverse;

/* The direction in which lines of text are stacked */
flex-direction: column;

/* Like <column>, but reversed */
flex-direction: column-reverse;

/* Global values */
flex-direction: inherit;
flex-direction: initial;
flex-direction: unset;

Values

The following values are accepted:

row
The flex container's main-axis is defined to be the same as the text direction. The main-start and main-end points are the same as the content direction.
row-reverse
Behaves the same as row but the main-start and main-end points are permuted.
column
The flex container's main-axis is the same as the block-axis. The main-start and main-end points are the same as the before and after points of the writing-mode.
column-reverse
Behaves the same as column but the main-start and main-end are permuted.

Formal syntax

row | row-reverse | column | column-reverse

Example

HTML

<h4>This is a Column-Reverse</h4>
<div id="content">
    <div id="box" style="background-color:red;">A</div>
    <div id="box" style="background-color:lightblue;">B</div>
    <div id="box" style="background-color:yellow;">C</div>
</div>
<h4>This is a Row-Reverse</h4>
<div id="content1">
    <div id="box1" style="background-color:red;">A</div>
    <div id="box1" style="background-color:lightblue;">B</div>
    <div id="box1" style="background-color:yellow;">C</div>
</div>

CSS

#content {
  width: 200px;
  height: 200px;
  border: 1px solid #c3c3c3;
  display: -webkit-flex;
  -webkit-flex-direction: column-reverse;
  display: flex;
  flex-direction: column-reverse;
}

#box {
  width: 50px;
  height: 50px;
}

#content1 {
  width: 200px;
  height: 200px;
  border: 1px solid #c3c3c3;
  display: -webkit-flex;
  -webkit-flex-direction: row-reverse;
  display: flex;
  flex-direction: row-reverse;
}

#box1 {
  width: 50px;
  height: 50px;
}

Result

Specifications

Specification Status Comment
CSS Flexible Box Layout Module
The definition of 'flex-direction' in that specification.
Candidate Recommendation Initial definition

Browser compatibility

Feature Firefox (Gecko) Chrome Internet Explorer Opera Safari
Basic support 18.0 (18.0)[1]
20.0 (20.0)
28.0 (28.0)[2]
21.0-webkit

10 -ms
11

12.10

7 -webkit

Feature Firefox Mobile (Gecko) Android IE Phone Opera Mobile Safari Mobile
Basic support ? ? No support 12.10

No support

[1] To activate flexbox support for Firefox 18 and 19, the user has to change the about:config preference layout.css.flexbox.enabled to true.

[2] Multi-line flexbox is supported since Firefox 28.

In addition to the unprefixed support, Gecko 48.0 (Firefox 48.0 / Thunderbird 48.0 / SeaMonkey 2.45) added support for a -webkit prefixed version of the property for web compatibility reasons behind the preference layout.css.prefixes.webkit, defaulting to false. Since Gecko 49.0 (Firefox 49.0 / Thunderbird 49.0 / SeaMonkey 2.46) the preference defaults to true.

See also

Document Tags and Contributors

 Last updated by: Sebastianz,