1

Firefox does not wrap words in a title attribute:

<a title="longword"></a>

Is there a way to do word-wrapping in that case? I tried with:

<a title="longword" style="word-wrap:break-word;"></a>

but it does not work.

Chrome, instead, automatically wraps.

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  • 2
    thats up to the web browser. have you considered writing your own tooltip? Jan 22, 2012 at 1:42

4 Answers 4

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No, you cannot make Firefox deviate from its way of rendering title attribute values; cf. to How can I use a carriage return in a HTML tooltip?

The tooltips created by using title attributes are of questionable usability (tiny font that cannot be easily increased by the user; disapperance after some seconds; etc.), so they are suitable (at most) for short advisory titles (mainly for links), which not cause a need for wrapping.

For longer tooltips, consider using CSS techniques. Or just put the tip into the text proper.

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  • The tooltip I have done works fine for what I need. Thanks for the "carriage return problem" link, I didn't think about it.
    – Simon
    Jan 22, 2012 at 13:53
  • Why not update the answer to simply say that &#10; works?
    – Weihui Guo
    Aug 8, 2018 at 19:04
2

For what it's worth, the only part of the HTML5 specifications that deals with line breaks in title attributes states:

If the title attribute's value contains U+000A LINE FEED (LF) characters, the content is split into multiple lines. Each U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character represents a line break.

So you could break up the title attribute on the server-side, although this is unlikely to be a desirable solution. Alternatively, you can try inserting zero width spaces, though browser support for this may also be inconsistent.

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  • This works in Chrome, Firefox and IE as of 2014/08! Use &#x0A; in the title attribute. Be careful, IE wraps the title tooltips on its own, so it's probably best to check there first how the wrapping is done and "emulate" it by placing linefeeds at the same spots to avoid having extra linebreaks in IE. Aug 14, 2014 at 16:11
0

@2023-05

Simply use &#10; as the linebreak like this.

<div title="A &#10; Leaf &#10; Falls &#10; with &#10; Loneliness">
  Hover your mouse here to see the native tooltip content.
</div>

Here is a working demo. https://codepen.io/shrekuu/pen/dygLKGO

enter image description here

-3

Use escaped n, example:

<input type="text" title="first line \n second line"></input>
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  • 2
    Did you even try? edge, firefox, or chrome? None of them works. In fact, &#10; works.
    – Weihui Guo
    Aug 8, 2018 at 19:00

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