A webpage I'm working on uses some fancy chevrons for bullet points in a list. I'd like to define a list style that scales with the font size of the list items itself: doing so is the ultimate end goal of my problem here.
We currently keep those chevrons in SVG files (one of which is offered below) so they can be magnified without looking terrible. They're referenced like this:
ul.foo {
list-style-image: url("../images/chevron.svg");
}
We use these chevron lists a few times each around the site. Sometimes they're with large text, sometimes with smaller or normal sized text. We're forced to create a new chevron image for each font size (e.g. chevron-small.svg
, chevron-medium.svg
, chevron-large.svg
, etc), but surely there's a better way that lets us use just the one image and have it scaled up and down on its own based on the font size!
However, I haven't figured out how to make the image scale with the font size yet.
The W3 wiki for list-style-image suggests that "if the image's intrinsic width or height is given as a percentage, then that percentage is resolved against 1em", which sounds like it's exactly what we want. I haven't worked out how to make this happen though. Brian Campbell's answer to How can I make an svg scale with its parent container? appears to suggest a way to make this percentage thing happen, but when I set a width or height of 100%, the chevron bullet points show up extremely tiny or not at all, even when the font size is large.
How can I make this list-style-image scale fully with the text size, so that as a UL's text size gets larger, the bullet image does too?
(Glyph fonts: We can't use them. They'd get the job done visually, but they have a bad impact on accessibility because screen readers won't read out the bullets as bullets but as some other weird character. We could define a custom glyph font, possibly, and replace the bullet characters in it with ours, but the file size overhead in doing so would be excessive. As far as I can tell, we need to use an image.)
My SVG's code
The SVG comes from Illustrator and has this code:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<!-- Generator: Adobe Illustrator 15.1.0, SVG Export Plug-In . SVG Version: 6.00 Build 0) -->
<!DOCTYPE svg PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD SVG 1.1//EN" "http://www.w3.org/Graphics/SVG/1.1/DTD/svg11.dtd">
<svg version="1.1" id="Layer_1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" x="0px" y="0px"
width="8px" height="14px" viewBox="0 0 8 14" enable-background="new 0 0 8 14" xml:space="preserve">
<path fill="#666666" d="M0.37,12.638l5.726-5.565L0.531,1.347C0.252,1.059,0.261,0.601,0.547,0.321
c0.289-0.279,0.746-0.272,1.026,0.016l6.062,6.24c0,0.002,0.006,0.004,0.008,0.006c0.068,0.07,0.119,0.156,0.156,0.244
C7.902,7.088,7.846,7.399,7.631,7.61c-0.002,0.004-0.006,0.004-0.01,0.006l-6.238,6.063c-0.143,0.141-0.331,0.209-0.514,0.205
c-0.187-0.006-0.372-0.078-0.511-0.221C0.076,13.376,0.083,12.919,0.37,12.638"/>
</svg>
Which shows up like the following, where the text is 16px, and the chevron isn't scaling to font size, but is decently large and visible (a bit larger than desired in this case, but let's ignore that, since the image itself can be edited):
As I stated, I tried to follow Brian Campbell's answer and set the width or height property to 100%:
<svg version="1.1" id="Layer_1" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" x="0px" y="0px"
width="100%" viewBox="0 0 8 14" enable-background="new 0 0 8 14" xml:space="preserve">
However, having either width or height defined as 100% seems to make the chevrons tiny, and much smaller than 1em, as stated:
(Screenshot from Firefox. In Chrome they're a little bit bigger, still far smaller than 16px.)
Code snippet
/*
The image referenced here is the SVG provided above, with base 64 encoding. It is the
freshly exported version that still has a defined width and height of 8px and 14px.
You may wish to just save the SVG above locally.
*/
ul {
list-style-image: url('data:image/svg+xml;base64,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');
/* Or if you wish to save the SVG locally:
list-style-image: url('chevron.svg');
*/
}
.small-list {
font-size: 85%;
}
.large-list {
font-size: 150%;
}
<ul class="small-list">
<li>The goal is to make the chevron smaller for this list</li>
<li>Specifically, just slightly smaller than capital letters, as stated.</li>
<li>Nomas matas</li>
<li>Roris dedit</li>
</ul>
<ul class="large-list">
<li>And larger for this list</li>
<li>Nomas matas</li>
<li>Roris dedit</li>
</ul>
You can use SVG as an embed image:
*CSS
A helpfull article:
http://soqr.fr/testsvg/embed-svg-liquid-layout-responsive-web-design.php
For a better browser compatibility, i recommend convert your SVG files into a font, you can do that here:
https://icomoon.io/
Or use a predesigned font like FontAwesome:
http://fontawesome.io/
Here you will get the icon that you need:
http://fontawesome.io/icon/chevron-right/
Implement FontAwesome with:
But i highly recommend that you download the source files instead of using man in middle files.
And add this CSS:
HTML
You can get a preview here:
http://jsfiddle.net/a1vkeg6c/1/
Of this way you will have the same retina support of SVG that you want, and even in a more practical way.
I hope been helpful!
I would approach solving this problem using a pseudo element before each
li
Here is the markup
Explanation:
ul
li
using the:before
selector andcontent: '\2022';
content: '\2022';
adds the unicode bullet point, •, for screen readers to read out. The text indent moves it well out of sight.em
so that they adjust proportionally when thefont-size
is changed. Finally, we also position the background where the bullet would have been.background-size: .4em .7em;
tells the browser to size the background the way the image should be sized, we need to maintain the correct aspect ratio here.background-position: 0 .3em;
moves the chevron image in line with the text.width: .4em;
makes the psuedo element just wide enough to fit the image, andheight: 1em;
makes it match line height, and be tall enough to fit the offset as well.Caveat: - IE 8 doesn't support
background-size
, but I presume that this will not be an issue as it also doesn't support rendering svg.This uses your svg as the background image for the ::before content, sized using em's to keep it the same size as the font. The image will be just smaller than the same size as the text no matter how you size the text or if you zoom in or out.
You could define the svg in your css directly and change the height and width as needed, not very DRY, but it works:
Or you could dry it out a little by using the svg as a background image rather than as a list style image. Note that placing the svg in the css isn't necessary here:
In your SVG image XML you must remove the
width
andheight
attributes, and then the SVG will scale to be 100% or 1em of thefont-size
Here is the base64 version of your image with this done:
Unfortunately you cannot explicitly set the size of a
list-style-image
, however there is one hack solution which doesn't require any further HTML;If your
LI
elements only contain a single line of text (which is quite often the case with lists) then you can use the css selector::first-line
to scale your font-size up or down without affecting your list-style-image.Giving this alternative solution: