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The CSS radial-gradient()
function creates an <image>
which represents a gradient of colors radiating from an origin, the center of the gradient. The result of this function is an object of the CSS <gradient>
data type.
Radial gradients are defined by their center, the ending shape contour and position, and color stops. The radial gradient consists, going from its center to its ending shape and potentially beyond, of successive uniformly-scaled concentric shapes, identical to the ending shape. Color stops are positioned on a virtual gradient ray going out horizontally of the center to the right. Percentages positioning of color stops are relative to the intersection between the ending shape and this gradient ray representing 100%
. Each shape is monocolor and defined by the color on the gradient ray it intersects.
Ending shapes can only be circle
or ellipse
.
Like any other gradient, a CSS radial gradient is not a CSS <color>
but an image with no intrinsic dimensions, i. e. it has no natural or preferred size, nor ratio. Its concrete size will match the one of the element it applies to.
The radial-gradient
function does not allow repeating gradients. For such a functionality, use the CSS repeating-radial-gradient()
function.
Syntax
// Definition of the ending shape radial-gradient( circle, … ) /* Synonym of radial-gradient( circle farthest-corner, … ) */ radial-gradient( ellipse, … ) /* Synonym of radial-gradient( ellipse farthest-corner, … ) */ radial-gradient( <extent-keyword>, … ) /* It draws a circle */ radial-gradient( circle radius, … ) /* A centered circle of the given length. It can't be a percentage */ radial-gradient( ellipse x-axis y-axis, … ) /* The two semi-major axes are given, horizontal, then vertical */ // Definition of the position of the shape radial-gradient ( … at <position>, … ) // Definition of the color stops radial-gradient ( …, <color-stop>, … ) radial-gradient ( …, <color-stop>, <color-stop> )
Values
<position>
- A
<position>
, interpreted in the same way asbackground-position
ortransform-origin
. If omitted, the default iscenter
. <shape>
- The gradient's shape. This is one of
circle
(meaning that the gradient's shape is a circle with constant radius) orellipse
(meaning that the shape is an axis-aligned ellipse). The default value isellipse
. <color-stop>
- Representing a fixed color at a precise position, this value is composed by a
<color>
value, followed by an optional stop position (either a<percentage>
or a<length>
along the virtual gradient ray). A percentage of0%
, or a length of0
, represents the center of the gradient, the value100%
of the intersection of the ending shape with the virtual gradient ray. Percentage values in-between are linearly positioned on the gradient ray. <extent-keyword>
- Keywords describing how big the ending shape must be. The possible keywords are:
-
Constant Description closest-side
The gradient's ending shape meets the side of the box closest to its center (for circles) or meets both the vertical and horizontal sides closest to the center (for ellipses). closest-corner
The gradient's ending shape is sized so it exactly meets the closest corner of the box from its center. farthest-side
Similar to closest-side, except the ending shape is sized to meet the side of the box farthest from its center (or vertical and horizontal sides). farthest-corner
The gradient's ending shape is sized so it exactly meets the farthest corner of the box from its center. cover
andcontain
) as synonyms of the standardfarthest-corner
andclosest-side
respectively. Use the standard keywords only, as some implementations have already dropped those older variants.
Formal syntax
radial-gradient(
[ [ circle || <length> ] [ at <position> ]? , |
[ ellipse || [ <length> | <percentage> ]{2} ] [ at <position> ]? , |
[ [ circle | ellipse ] || <extent-keyword> ] [ at <position> ]? , |
at <position> ,
]?
<color-stop> [ , <color-stop> ]+
)
where <extent-keyword> = closest-corner | closest-side | farthest-corner | farthest-side
and <color-stop> = <color> [ <percentage> | <length> ]?
Example 1
Using the following CSS we can get an ellipse background in the farthest-corner
at 45px 45px
, changing color from Turquoise (#00FFFF
), to White, to Blue (#0000FF
):
body { width: 100vh; height: 100vh; background-image: radial-gradient(ellipse farthest-corner at 45px 45px , #00FFFF 0%, rgba(0, 0, 255, 0) 50%, #0000FF 95%); }
Example 2
This will procude an ellipse background in the farthest-corner
at 470px 45px
, changing color from Yellow (#FFFF80
), to Pale Maroon, to Pale Blue (#E6E6FF
):
body { width: 100vh; height: 100vh; background-image: radial-gradient(ellipse farthest-corner at 470px 47px , #FFFF80 20%, rgba(204, 153, 153, 0.4) 30%, #E6E6FF 60%); }
Example 3
This will procude an ellipse background in the farthest-corner
at 45px 45px,
changing color from Red (#FF0000
) to Blue (#0000FF
):
body { width: 100vh; height: 100vh; background-image: radial-gradient(farthest-corner at 45px 45px , #FF0000 0%, #0000FF 100%); }
Example 4
This will procude a fuzzy circle with a 16px
radius:
body { width: 100vh; height: 100vh; background-image: radial-gradient(16px at 60px 50% , #000000 0%, #000000 14px, rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.3) 18px, rgba(0, 0, 0, 0) 19px); }
Specifications
Specification | Status | Comment |
---|---|---|
CSS Image Values and Replaced Content Module Level 3 The definition of 'radial-gradients()' in that specification. |
Candidate Recommendation | Initial definition |
Browser compatibility
Feature | Firefox (Gecko) | Chrome | Internet Explorer | Opera | Safari |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support (on background and background-image ) |
3.6 (1.9.2)-moz[1] 16 (16) |
10.0 (534.16)-webkit[2] | 10.0[3] | 11.60-o | 5.1-webkit[2] |
On border-image |
29 (29) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) |
On any other property that accept <image> |
No support | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) |
Legacy webkit syntax | No support | 3-webkit[2] | No support | No support | 4.0-webkit[2] |
at syntax (final standard syntax) |
10 (10)-moz[1] 16 (16)[4] |
26 | 10.0 | 11.60-o[2] 2.12 |
No support |
Interpolation hints (a percent without a color) | 36 (36) | 40 | 27 |
Feature | Android | Firefox Mobile (Gecko) | IE Phone | Opera Mobile | Safari Mobile |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Basic support (on background and background-image ) |
(Yes) | 1.0 (1.9.2)-moz[1] 16.0 (16) |
10 | (Yes) | (Yes) |
On border-image |
(Yes) | 29.0 (29) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) |
On any other property that accept <image> |
No support | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) | (Yes) |
Legacy webkit syntax | ? | No support | ? | ? | ? |
at syntax (final standard syntax) |
? | 10.0 (10)-moz[1] 16.0 (16) |
10 | ? | ? |
[1] Firefox 3.6 implemented, prefixed, an early syntax. Before Firefox 36, Gecko didn't apply gradient on the pre-multiplied color space, leading to shade of grey unexpectedly appearing when used with transparency. Since Firefox 42, the prefixed version of gradients can be disabled by setting layout.css.prefixes.gradients
to false
.
[2] Webkit implemented, prefixed, an early syntax. WebKit since 528 supports the legacy -webkit-gradient(radial,…)
function. See also their current support for radial gradients.
[3] Internet Explorer 5.5 through 9.0 supports proprietary filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.Gradient()
filter.
[4] In addition to the unprefixed support, Gecko 44.0 (Firefox 44.0 / Thunderbird 44.0 / SeaMonkey 2.41) added support for a -webkit
prefixed version of the function 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
- Using CSS gradients,
repeating-radial-gradient()
,linear-gradient()
- WebKit's original proposal: https://webkit.org/blog/175/introducing-css-gradients/
- WebKit's new implementation: https://webkit.org/blog/1424/css3-gradients/