I want to create a close button using CSS only.
I'm sure I'm not the first to do this, so does anyone know which font has an 'x' the same width as height, so that it can be used cross-browser to look like a close button?
✖ works really well. The HTML code is ✖
.
An alternative is ✕
: ✕
Lucida Sans Unicode
and Arial Unicode MS
also support such unicode symbols. If you don't use a font that supports these characters on some browsers (especially old IE) all you will get are rectangles indicating unsupported symbols. I use a stripped down version of DejaVu for such symbols.
HTML
✕ ✕
✓ ✓
✖ ✖
✔ ✔
✗ ✗
✘ ✘
× ×
×
CSS
Inside a ::before
or ::after
pseudo-element use the escaped \
Unicode HEX value like:
[class^="ico-"], [class*=" ico-"] {
font: normal 1em/1 Arial, sans-serif;
display: inline-block;
}
.ico-times::before { content: "\2716"; }
.ico-check::before { content: "\2714"; }
<i class="ico-times" role="img" aria-label="Cancel"></i>
<i class="ico-check" role="img" aria-label="Accept"></i>
Language | Syntax | Example |
---|---|---|
HTML | ✕ | <button class="close" type="button">✕ Close</button> |
CSS | \2715 | .close::before { content: '\2715'; } |
JavaScript | \u2715 | document.querySelector(".close").prepend("\u2715") |
What about using the ×-mark (the multiplication symbol), ×
in HTML, for that?
"x" (letter) should not be used to represent anything else other than the letter X.
Fonts with Square-Shaped "X"
This should work in all browsers as far back as IE6. If you don't care about IE6 thru 8 just remove the css hacks and conditional comment.
/* IE 6 and 7 code */
.close {
*position: relative; /* IE7 and below */
_position: relative; /* IE6 */
}
.close span {
*position: absolute; /* IE7 and below */
_position: absolute; /* IE6 */
*top: 15px;
_top: 15px;
*right: 15px;
_right: 15px;
*font-size: 1.5em;
_font-size: 1.5em;
*color: #000;
_color: #000;
}
.close:hover span {
*color: #888;
_color: #888;
}
/* End - IE 6 and 7 code */
.close:before {
position: absolute;
top: 15px;
right: 15px;
opacity: 1;
color: #000;
font-size:1.5em;
content: '×'
}
.close:hover:before {
color: #888
}
<a href="#" class="close">
<!--[if lte IE 8]><span>×</span><![endif]-->
</a>
×
or ×
5 × 3 = 15
×
or ×
(styled with CSS for strong font weight)⨯
A ⨯ B
to denote the vector cross product of A and B.✖
⊗
A ⊗ B
to denote the tensor product of A and B.⊕
X
x
f(x) = x^2
to denote a function of x.χ
⼎
᳛
❌
🔴
❎
⌎
╯
☣
✠
⚔
✚
✜
⚔️
✕ is another great one that's not too thick. The HTML code is ✕
, or 2715
in hex.
As @Haza pointed out the times symbol can be used. Twitter Bootstrap maps this to a close icon for dismissing content like modals and alerts.
<button class="close">×</button>
As of Unicode 7.0 (June 2014): U+1F5D9 "Cancellation X"
This is probably pedantry, but so far no one has really given a solution "to create a close button using CSS only." only. Here you go:
#close:before {
content: "✖";
border: 1px solid gray;
background-color:#eee;
padding:0.5em;
cursor: pointer;
}
I prefer Font Awesome: http://fortawesome.github.io/Font-Awesome/icons/
The icon you would be looking for is fa-times
. It's as simple as this to use:
<button><i class="fa fa-times"></i> Close</button>
there's another one not mentioned here - nice thin - if you need that kind of look for your project: ╳
╳ or decimal: ╳
×
and font-family: Garamond, "Apple Garamond";
make it good enough. Garamond font is thin and web safe
×
is better than ✖
as ✖
behaves strangely in Edge and Internet explorer (tested in IE11). It doesn't get the right color and is replaced by an "emoji"
×
I am able to now edit the css
This works nicely for me:
<style>
a.closeX {
position: absolute;
right: 0px; top: 0px; width:20px;
background-color: #FFF; color: black;
margin-top:-15px; margin-right:-15px; border-radius: 20px;
padding-left: 3px; padding-top: 1px;
cursor:pointer; z-index: -1;
font-size:16px; font-weight:bold;
}
</style>
<div id="content">
<a class="closeX" id="closeX" onclick='$("#content").hide();'>✖</a>
Click "X" to close this box
</div>
Forget about a font and use a background image!
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en" >
<head>
<title>Select :after pseudo class/element</title>
<style type="text/css">
.close {
background:url(http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jqueryui/1.8/themes/base/images/ui-icons_222222_256x240.png) NO-REPEAT -96px -128px;
text-indent:-10000px;
width:20px;
height:20px;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<input type="button" class="close" value="Close" />
<button class="close">Close</button>
</body>
</html>
This will be more accessible for users visiting the page with a screen reader.
aria-label="Close"
is a good way to go (as shown here in this W3 example or this MDN example) and then you can use any visual indicator you want without compromising the accessibility.
Jan 2, 2021 at 17:30
aria-label
could probably work great here - but ARIA only became a completed recommendation in 2014 and I wrote this answer in 2011! Equally, the ARIA Authoring Practices also includes mis-use of aria-label=
as an example of ARIA which can cover up or override semantics or content in a way which is damaging to accessibility. WAI-ARIA can be easy to get wrong, and hard to test - unless a team has some dedicated a11y testing for ARIA, I discourage its use because it can do as much harm as good.
Jan 17, 2021 at 4:03
This is for people who want to make their X
small/big and red!
HTML:
<div class="col-sm-2"> <span><div class="red-x">✖</div></span>
<p>close</p>
</div>
<div class="red-x big-x">✖</div>
CSS:
.red-x {
color: red;
}
.big-x {
font-size: 70px;
text-align: center;
}
You can use text that is only accessible to screen readers by placing it in a span which you hide in an accessible way. Place the x in the CSS which can't be read by screen readers, thus won't confuse, but is visible on the page, and also accessible by keyboard users.
<style>
.hidden {opacity:0; position:absolute; width:0;}
.close {padding:4px 8px; border:1px solid #000; background-color:#fff; cursor:pointer;}
.close:before {content:'\00d7'; color:red; font-size:2em;}
</style>
<button class="close"><span class="hidden">close</span></button>
Using modern browsers you can rotate a + sign:
.popupClose:before {
content:'+';
}
.popupClose {
position:relative;
float:right;
right:10px;
top:0px;
padding:2px;
cursor:pointer;
margin:2px;
color:grey;
font-size:32pt;
transform:rotate(45deg);
}
then simply place the following html where you need:
<span class='popupClose'></span>
Just in case, someone is searching for the right and wrong marks:
char rightMark = '\u2713';
char wrongMark = '\u2717';
Will print:
✓ Right Mark
✗ Wrong Mark
For CSS: just use the content: "\d7";
which is the ×
html entity, so it's widely supported on mobile devices as well.
.close:before {
content: "\d7";
font-size: 30px;
font-style: normal;
}
<span class="close"></span>
For those who are looking for the most supported hamburger "icon" (3 lines):
content: "\2261";
which is the ≡
html entity.