Custom properties (--*): CSS variables
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since April 2017 .
Property names that are prefixed with
--
, like
--example-name
, represent
custom properties
that contain a value that can be used in other declarations using the
var()
function.
Custom properties are scoped to the element(s) they are declared on, and participate in the cascade: the value of such a custom property is that from the declaration decided by the cascading algorithm.
Initial value | see prose |
---|---|
Applies to | all elements |
Inherited | yes |
Computed value | as specified with variables substituted |
Animation type | discrete |
Syntax
--somekeyword: left;
--somecolor: #0000ff;
--somecomplexvalue: 3px 6px rgb(20 32 54);
<declaration-value>
This value matches any sequence of one or more tokens, so long as the sequence does not contain any disallowed token. It represents the entirety of what a valid declaration can have as its value.
Note: Custom property names are case sensitive — --my-color
will be treated as a separate custom property to --My-color
.
Example
HTML
html
<p id="firstParagraph">
This paragraph should have a blue background and yellow text.
<p id="secondParagraph">
This paragraph should have a yellow background and blue text.
<div id="container">
<p id="thirdParagraph">
This paragraph should have a green background and yellow text.
</div>
CSS
css
:root {
--first-color: #16f;
--second-color: #ff7;
#firstParagraph {
background-color: var(--first-color);
color: var(--second-color);
#secondParagraph {
background-color: var(--second-color);
color: var(--first-color);
#container {
--first-color: #290;
#thirdParagraph {
background-color: var(--first-color);
color: var(--second-color);