How can you display a long string, website address, word or set of symbols with automatic line breaks to keep a div width? I guess a wordwrap of sorts. Usually adding a space works but is there a CSS solution such as word-wrap?

For example it (very nastily) overlaps divs, forces horizontal scrolling etc. wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww

What can I add to the above string to fit it neatly within a few lines in a div or within the browser window?

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Even Stack Overflow doesn't word wrap : / – AlbertoPL May 13 '09 at 6:10
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Well.... 10 months on and it looks like stackoverflow now has a fix for the original messy post - they've added the style word-wrap: break-word; which does the trick in Chrome. – Peter Apr 2 '10 at 9:07
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4 Answers

up vote 20 down vote accepted

This question has been asked here before:

Long story short:

As far as CSS solutions go you have: overflow: scroll; to force the element to show scrollbars and overflow:hidden; to just cut off any extra text. There is text-overflow:ellipsis; and word-wrap: break-word; but they are IE only (break-word is in the CSS3 draft, however, so it will be the solution to this 5 years from now).

Bottom line is that if it is very important for you to stop this from happening with wrapping the text over to the next line the only reasonable solution is to inject &shy; (soft hyphen), <wbr> (word break tag), or &#8203; (zero-width space, same effect as &shy; minus hyphen) in your string server side. If you don't mind Javascript, however, there is the hyphenator which seems to be pretty solid.

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I've marked this as the "solution" to the question, but to me it still has a few holes... break-word is essentially what I'd be looking at, the other options can insert manual breaks, spaces, hyphens etc but still won't neatly wrap the line. – Peter May 13 '09 at 13:47
Unfortunately there is no neat or elegant solution to this particular problem. We're all just getting by until break-word is supported. – Paolo Bergantino May 13 '09 at 17:40
If you end up doing server side line breaks, and you're using PHP, you can use the wordwrap function. – Roman Stolper Dec 15 '09 at 7:53
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word-wrap: break-word; is available in IE7+, FF 3.5 and Webkit enabled browsers (Safari/Chrome etc). To handle IE6 you will also need to declare word-wrap: break-all;

If FF 2.0 is not on your browser matrix then using these is a viable solution. Unfortunately it does not hyphenate the preceding line where the word is broken which is a typographical nightmare. I would suggest using the Hyphenator as suggested by Paolo which is unobtrusive JavaScript. The fall-back for non JavaScript enabled users will then be the broken word without hyphens. I can live with that for the time being. This problem will most likely arise in a CMS, where the web designer does not have control over what content will be entered or where line-breaks and soft-hyphens may be implemented.

I have taken a look at the W3 specification where hyphenation in CSS3 is discussed. Unfortunately it appears there are a few suggestions but nothing concrete yet. It appears the browser vendors are yet to implement anything either yet. I have checked both Mozilla and Webkit for proprietory code but there is no sign of any.

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This worked for me. Most of the world has IE7+, FF3.5+ or Webkit now, so I think you are set to use word-wrap: break-word. – Jeff Davis Mar 31 '11 at 22:07
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Hopefully someday we'll get access to the word-wrap property in CSS3: Force Wrapping: the 'word-wrap' property.

Someday...

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Just mentioned this over here but probably more relevant to this question. The best property shortly will be overflow-wrap. and the best value if it gets implemented would be:

* {
   overflow-wrap:hyphenate. 
}

Doesen't seem to be supported in any way just yet at the time of writing on the iphone or firefox, and overflow-wrap:hyphenate isn't even in the working draft.

in the meantime i'd use:

p {
    word-wrap: break-word;
    -moz-hyphens:auto; 
    -webkit-hyphens:auto; 
    -o-hyphens:auto; 
    hyphens:auto; 
}
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