1786

I'm having a hard time getting my head around font scaling.

I currently have a website with a body font-size of 100%. 100% of what though? This seems to compute out at 16 pixels.

I was under the impression that 100% would somehow refer to the size of the browser window, but apparently not because it's always 16 pixels whether the window is resized down to a mobile width or full-blown widescreen desktop.

How can I make the text on my site scale in relation to its container? I tried using em, but this doesn't scale either.

My reasoning is that things like my menu become squished when you resize, so I need to reduce the px font-size of .menuItem among other elements in relation to the width of the container. (For example, in the menu on a large desktop, 22px works perfectly. Move down to a tablet width and 16px is more appropriate.)

I'm aware I can add breakpoints, but I really want the text to scale as well as having extra breakpoints, otherwise, I'll end up with hundreds of breakpoints for every 100-pixels decrease in width to control the text.

5
  • 51
    What you're looking for is called responsive or viewport sized typography. css-tricks.com/viewport-sized-typography Apr 17, 2013 at 9:46
  • 12
    Give FitText a look.
    – Patsy Issa
    Nov 6, 2013 at 13:40
  • 4
    Use CSS container queries.
    – Janosh
    Jan 29, 2023 at 18:01
  • @PatsyIssa Is there a react version of fittext? Oct 7, 2023 at 15:28
  • I'm looking for a way to adjust font-sizes dynamically within a container. Specifically, I have a <ul> that may grow to an indeterminate size, and I'd like for the font-size of the <li> elements to shrink depending on how long the list gets. I don't think container queries would help me... would they?
    – Nosnetrom
    Jan 25 at 18:24

40 Answers 40

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1

For dynamic text, this plugin is quite useful:

http://freqdec.github.io/slabText/

Simply add CSS:

.slabtexted .slabtext
{
    display: -moz-inline-box;
    display: inline-block;
    white-space: nowrap;
}
.slabtextinactive .slabtext
{
    display: inline;
    white-space: normal;
    font-size: 1em !important;
    letter-spacing: inherit !important;
    word-spacing: inherit !important;
    *letter-spacing: normal !important;
    *word-spacing: normal !important;
}
.slabtextdone .slabtext
{
    display: block;
}

And the script:

$('#mydiv').slabText();
1

If you want to fit it inside of a particular container, like a div, use:

width: max-content;

Also tweaking font-size helps a lot, e.g. font-size: 75%.

0

Straight up media queries seems like a much simpler and more understandable solution to resizing font based on container sizes that may be dynamic.

The below resizes the font to the size of the container, whether the container is scaled to the size of the viewport, or if it's reached its max value. If you have non-100% wide containers, you could adjust the vw accordingly.

.container {
    width: 100%;
    max-width: 600px;
}
.headline {
    font-size: 20vw;
}
.subhead {
    font-size: 5vw;
}
@media (min-width:600px) {
    .headline {
        font-size: 120px;
    }
    .subhead {
        font-size: 32px;
    }
}
0

I just created a demo how to do it. It uses transform:scale() to achieve that with some JS that watches element resizing. Works nicely for my needs.

0

You can interpolate the font size for the window width:

font-size: calc(
      ${minFontSizeInPixel} *
        (
          1px -
            clamp(
              0px,
              (100vw - ${minWindowWidth}px) /
                (${maxWindowWidth} - ${minWindowWidth}),
              1px
            )
        ) + ${maxFontSizeInPixel} *
        clamp(
          0px,
          (100vw - ${minWindowWidth}px) /
            (${maxWindowWidth} - ${minWindowWidth}),
          1px
        )
    );
0

I wanted to like the accepted answer, but fundamentally the ones that met my criteria all required used a library. Rather than acquaint myself with yet another library and then figure out how to use it and prepare to debug it if it didn't work, I decided to write a simple function that is working perfectly for me.

Theory:

  • pass in the string that you need to fit
  • pass in the parent that you will be inheriting text styles from
  • optionally pass in custom attributes (e.g., class/id you'll inherit font and other attributes from, or just custom inline styles)
  • function will create a text element off screen with that text, that parent, and those attributes, with font size of 1px, and measure it
  • then, on a loop, it will increase the font size pixel by pixel until it surpasses the width limit; once it has done that, it will return the last one that did fit
  • it then deletes the test element
  • this all happens in the blink of an eye of course

Limitations:

  • I don't care about dynamic screen resizing, as that's not relevant to my context. I only care about screen size at runtime when generating the text.
  • I rely on one small helper function I also use elsewhere in my code, that basically exists as a one-function-version of mithril.js; honestly, I use this little function in almost every project, and it's worth learning itself.
  function findMaxFontSize(
    string="a string", 
    parent=document.body, 
    attributes={id:'font-size-finder',class:'some-class-with-font'}
  ) {
    // by using parent, we can infer the same font inheritance;
    // you can also manually specify fonts or relevant classes/id with attributes if preferred/needed
    attributes.style = 'position:absolute; left:-10000; font-size:1px;' + (attributes.style || "");
    let testFontEl = createEl('p', attributes, string);
    parent.appendChild(testFontEl);
    let currentWidth = testFontEl.offsetWidth;
    let workingFontSize = 1;
    let i = 0;
    while (currentWidth < maxWidth && i < 1000) {
      testFontEl.style.fontSize = Number(testFontEl.style.fontSize.split("px")[0]) + 1 + "px";
      currentWidth = testFontEl.offsetWidth;
      if (currentWidth < maxWidth) {
        workingFontSize = testFontEl.style.fontSize;
      }
      i++; // safety to prevent infinite loops
    }
    console.log("determined maximum font size:",workingFontSize,'one larger would produce',currentWidth,'max width allowed is',maxWidth,'parent is',parent);
    parent.removeChild(testFontEl);
    return workingFontSize.split("px")[0];
  }
// utility function, though you could easily modify the function above to work without this.
  // normally these have no default values specified, but adding them here
  // to make usage clearer.
  function createEl(tag="div", attrs={class:'some-class'}, children=[]) {
    let el = document.createElement(tag);
    if (attrs) {
      Object.keys(attrs).forEach(attr => {
        el.setAttribute(attr, attrs[attr])
      })
    }
    if (children) {
      children = Array.isArray(children) ? children : [children];
      for (let child of children) {
        if (typeof child === "number") child = ""+child;
        if (typeof child === "string") {
          el.insertAdjacentText("afterbegin", child);
        }
        else {
          try {
            el.appendChild(child)
          } catch (e) {
            debugger
          }
        }
      }
    }
    return el;
  };

use:

    const getUsername = () => "MrHarry";
    const username = getUsername();
    const anchor = document.querySelector('.container');
    const titleFontSize = findMaxFontSize(`Welcome, ${username}`, anchor, {style:'font-weight:900;'});
    const titleFontStyle = `font-size:${titleFontSize}px;`;  
-1

But what if the container is not the viewport (body)?

The real answer is in the transform property allows you to visually manipulate an element by skewing, rotating, translating, or scaling:

https://css-tricks.com/almanac/properties/t/transform/

1
-1

If the issue is font getting too big on widescreen desktop, I think the easiest CSS method would be something like this (assuming wrapper maximum 1000 pixels wide)

.specialText{
    font-size: 2.4vw;
}

@media only screen and (min-width: 1000px) {
    .specialText {
        width: 24px;
    }
}

So it is auto sized for any screen smaller than the maximum width of your container, and fixed size when the screen is wider (like virtually all desktop and laptops).

-1

In order to make font-size fit its container, rather than the window, see the resizeFont() function I have shared in this question (a combination of other answers, most of which are already linked here). It is triggered using window.addEventListener('resize', resizeFont);.

Vanilla JavaScript: Resize font-awesome to fit container

JavaScript:

function resizeFont() {
  var elements  = document.getElementsByClassName('resize');
  console.log(elements);
  if (elements.length < 0) {
    return;
  }
  _len = elements.length;
  for (_i = 0; _i < _len; _i++) {
    var el = elements[_i];
    el.style.fontSize = "100%";
    for (var size = 100; el.scrollHeight > el.clientHeight; size -= 10) {
      el.style.fontSize = size + '%';
    }
  }
}

You could perhaps use vw/vh as a fallback, so you dynamically assign em or rem units using JavaScript, ensuring that the fonts do scale to the window if JavaScript is disabled.

Apply the .resize class to all elements containing text you wish to be scaled.

Trigger the function prior to adding the window resize event listener. Then, any text which doesn't fit its container will be scaled down when the page loads, as well as when it is resized.

NOTE: The default font-size must be set to either em,rem or % to achieve proper results.

-1

What about this?
Setting the parent's font size equal to its width, then use a percentage for text element font size.

.element {
    width: 400px;
    font-size: 400px; /* equal to width */
}

.text {
    width: 10%;  /* will be 40px */
}

I find this really easy specially when you are dealing with icons, but also works for text.

/* start of styling */

* {
  margin: 0;
  padding: 0;
  box-sizing: border-box;
}

.box {
  display: block;
  background: cornflowerblue;
  height: max-content;
  margin-bottom: 32px;
}


/* end of styling */

.box p {
  font-size: 20%;
}
<div class="box" style="width: 400px; font-size: 400px">
  <p>Text</p>
</div>

<div class="box" style="width: 128px; font-size: 128px">
  <p>Text</p>
</div>


<div class="box" style="width: 10vw; font-size: 10vw">
  <p>Text</p>
</div>

<div class="box" style="width: 64px; font-size: 64px">
  <p>Text</p>
</div>

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