font-variant-alternates
The font-variant-alternates CSS property controls the usage of alternate glyphs. These alternate glyphs may be referenced by alternative names defined in @font-feature-values.
/* Keyword values */
font-variant-alternates: normal;
font-variant-alternates: historical-forms;
/* Functional notation values */
font-variant-alternates: stylistic(user-defined-ident);
font-variant-alternates: styleset(user-defined-ident);
font-variant-alternates: character-variant(user-defined-ident);
font-variant-alternates: swash(user-defined-ident);
font-variant-alternates: ornaments(user-defined-ident);
font-variant-alternates: annotation(user-defined-ident);
font-variant-alternates: swash(ident1) annotation(ident2);
/* Global values */
font-variant-alternates: initial;
font-variant-alternates: inherit;
font-variant-alternates: revert;
font-variant-alternates: unset;
The @font-feature-values at-rule can define names for alternative glyph functions (stylistic, styleset, character-variant, swash, ornament or annotation), associating the name with OpenType parameters. This property allows those human-readable names (defined in @font-feature-values) in the stylesheet.
Syntax
This property may take one of two forms:
- either the keyword
normal - or one or more of the other keywords and functions listed below, space-separated, in any order.
Values
normal-
This keyword deactivates alternate glyphs.
historical-forms-
This keyword enables historical forms — glyphs that were common in the past but not today. It corresponds to the OpenType value
hist. stylistic()-
This function enables stylistic alternates for individual characters. The parameter is a font-specific name mapped to a number. It corresponds to the OpenType value
salt, likesalt 2. styleset()-
This function enables stylistic alternatives for sets of characters. The parameter is a font-specific name mapped to a number. It corresponds to the OpenType value
ssXY, likess02. character-variant()-
This function enables specific stylistic alternatives for characters. It is similar to
styleset(), but doesn't create coherent glyphs for a set of characters; individual characters will have independent and not necessarily coherent styles. The parameter is a font-specific name mapped to a number. It corresponds to the OpenType valuecvXY, likecv02. swash()-
This function enables swash glyphs. The parameter is a font-specific name mapped to a number. It corresponds to the OpenType values
swshandcswh, likeswsh 2andcswh 2. ornaments()-
This function enables ornaments, like fleurons and other dingbat glyphs. The parameter is a font-specific name mapped to a number. It corresponds to the OpenType value
ornm, likeornm 2.Note: In order to preserve text semantics, font designers should include ornaments that don't match Unicode dingbat characters as ornamental variants of the bullet character (U+2022). Be aware that some existing fonts don't follow this advice.
annotation()-
This function enables annotations, like circled digits or inverted characters. The parameter is a font-specific name mapped to a number. It corresponds to the OpenType value
nalt, likenalt 2.
Formal definition
| Initial value | normal |
|---|---|
| Applies to | all elements. It also applies to ::first-letter and ::first-line. |
| Inherited | yes |
| Computed value | as specified |
| Animation type | discrete |
Formal syntax
normal | [ stylistic( <feature-value-name> ) || historical-forms || styleset( <feature-value-name># ) || character-variant( <feature-value-name># ) || swash( <feature-value-name> ) || ornaments( <feature-value-name> ) || annotation( <feature-value-name> ) ]where
<feature-value-name> = <custom-ident>
Examples
HTML
<p>Firefox rocks!</p>
<p class="variant">Firefox rocks!</p>
CSS
@font-feature-values "Leitura Display Swashes" {
@swash { fancy: 1 }
}
p {
font-size: 1.5rem;
}
.variant {
font-family: Leitura Display Swashes;
font-variant-alternates: swash(fancy);
}
Result
Note: You need to install the OpenType font Leitura Display Swashes for this example to work. You can find a few free versions for testing purposes, for example from fontsgeek.com.
Specifications
Not part of any standard.
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser