402

How can I get superscript done, only in CSS?

I have a stylesheet where I mark the external links with a superscript character, but I'm having a hard time getting the character aligned correctly.

What I have currently, looks like this:

a.external:after {
  font-size: 50%;
  vertical-align: top;
  content: "+";
}

but it doesn't work.

Naturally, I'd use the <sup>-tag, only if content would allow for HTML...

3
  • The "vertical-align:text-top" did not work for me in IE9. But, it did in FireFox 4.0. At least within a Wordpress context.
    – JosefB
    Mar 20, 2011 at 15:31
  • 1
    If content allowed HTML, separation of concerns would suffer.
    – Eva
    Sep 11, 2013 at 23:17
  • 2
    In case anyone else was wondering ... "Separation of Concerns (SoC) is a design principle for separating a computer program into distinct sections such that each section addresses a separate concern. A concern is a set of information that affects the code of a computer program." (source) 😉
    – ashleedawg
    Jan 28, 2021 at 3:29

15 Answers 15

584

You can do superscript with vertical-align: super, (plus an accompanying font-size reduction).

However, be sure to read the other answers here, particularly those by paulmurray and cletus, for useful information.

3
  • 34
    Also, the font-size has to be reduced to give the actual superscript effect.
    – Nirmal
    Jan 2, 2010 at 5:14
  • 5
    @paulmurray's answer below is more accurate and comprehensive. IMHO, it should be the accepted answer.
    – Doug Paul
    Feb 14, 2012 at 20:30
  • 4
    Saying "below" doesn't tend to help when there are three different ways of ordering answers. You're right though, paul's answer is a better one, and it's crazy this has over five times as many votes. Feb 22, 2012 at 17:47
218

Honestly I don't see the point in doing superscript/subscript in CSS only. There's no handy CSS attribute for it, just a bunch of homegrown implementations including:

.superscript { position: relative; top: -0.5em; font-size: 80%; }

or using vertical-align or I'm sure other ways. Thing is, it starts to get complicated:

The second point is worth emphasizing. Typically superscript/subscript is not actually a styling issue but is indicative of meaning.

Side note: It's worth mentioning this list of entities for common mathematical superscript and subscript expressions even though this question doesn't relate to that.

The sub/sup tags are in HTML and XHTML. I would just use those.

As for the rest of your CSS, the :after pseudo-element and content attributes are not widely supported. If you really don't want to put this manually in the HTML I think a Javascript-based solution is your next best bet. With jQuery this is as simple as:

$(function() {
  $("a.external").append("<sup>+</sup>");
};
9
  • 12
    With "not widely supported" you mean "not supported in IE", I suppose?
    – Boldewyn
    Jan 7, 2010 at 8:38
  • 3
    quirksmode.org/css/contents.html not supported in IE7 and lower or in IE8 in compatibility mode.
    – cletus
    Jan 7, 2010 at 8:50
  • 7
    ...which is quite exactly what I said, yes.
    – Boldewyn
    Jan 7, 2010 at 9:38
  • 2
    Used the accepted solution by @PeterBoughton at first, opted for this one as it does not skew line-height. Jul 15, 2013 at 18:03
  • 4
    Maybe you can't see the point because you don't know the requirements and the context. I have a system that wraps <span class="superscript"></span> instead of <sup> and it would be easier to implement that in CSS than to rewrite the system. In other words, what I'm trying to say, is that whether it makes sense of doing superscript in CSS or in HTML is outside the scope of the question.
    – Rolf
    Oct 13, 2017 at 9:20
146

The CSS documentation contains industry-standard CSS equivalent for all HTML constructs. That is: most web browsers these days do not explicitly handle SUB, SUP, B, I and so on - they (kinda sorta) are converted into SPAN elements with appropriate CSS properties, and the rendering engine only deals with that.

The page is Appendix D. Default style sheet for HTML 4

The bits you want are:

small, sub, sup { font-size: .83em }
sub             { vertical-align: sub }
sup             { vertical-align: super }
2
  • 15
    This works, but it screws up line-height. IMHO the only way not to screw up line-height is to use position:relative as suggested by cletus: stackoverflow.com/a/501689/260080 Mar 20, 2012 at 15:02
  • The following code seems to do the trick: sub { vertical-align: sub; line-height: 1.0; } for subscripts and sup { vertical-align: super; line-height: 1.0; } for superscripts. No need to bother with positioning. Jun 2, 2023 at 17:25
28

I was working on a page with the aim of having clearly legible text, with superscript elements NOT changing the line's top and bottom margins - with the following observations:

If for your main text you have line-height: 1.5em for example, you should reduce the line-height of your superscript text for it to appear correctly. I used line-height: 0.5em.

Also, vertical-align: super works well in most browsers but in IE8 when you have a superscript element present, the rest of that line is pushed down. So instead I used vertical-align: baseline together with a negative top and position: relative to achieve the same effect, which seems to work better across browsers.

So, to add to the "homegrown implementations":

.superscript {
    font-size: .83em;
    line-height: 0.5em;
    vertical-align: baseline;
    position: relative;
    top: -0.4em;
}
1
  • this cuts off when placed in div container
    – Alex G
    Jun 27, 2016 at 0:30
17

The following is taken from Mozilla Firefox's internal html.css:

sup {
  vertical-align: super;
  font-size: smaller;
  line-height: normal;
}

So, in your case it would be something, like:

.superscript {
  vertical-align: super;
  font-size: smaller;
  line-height: normal;
}
1
  • 1
    But the default SUP element doesn't correctly align a TM symbol vertically. Dec 3, 2022 at 22:01
15

http://htmldog.com/articles/superscript/ Essentially:

position: relative;
bottom: 0.5em;
font-size: 0.8em;

Works well in practice, as far as I can tell.

1
  • 1
    I'm using this in a Web page for TM symbols. It works well once the two constants are tuned for the font used. I use top with a negative offset instead of bottom with a positive offset, since the TM symbol is aligned with the top of the preceding character. Dec 4, 2022 at 1:29
8

This is another clean solution:

sub, sup {vertical-align: baseline; position: relative; font-size: 70%;} /* 70% size of its parent element font-size which is good. */
sub {bottom: -0.6em;} /* use em becasue they adapt to parent font-size */
sup {top: -0.6em;} /* use em becasue they adapt to parent font-size */

In this way you can still use sup/sub tags but you fixed their idious behavior to always screw up paragraph line height.

So now you can do:

  <p>This is a line of text.</p>
  <p>This is a line of text, <sub>with sub text.</sub></p>
  <p>This is a line of text, <sup>with sup text.</sup></p>
  <p>This is a line of text.</p>

And your paragraph line height should not get screwed up.

Tested on IE7, IE8, FF3.6, SAFARI4, CHROME5, OPERA9

I tested using a p {line-height: 1.3;} (that is a good line height unless you want your lines to stick too close) and it still works, cause "-0.6em" is such a small amount that also with that line height the sub/sub text will fit and don't go over each other.

Forgot a detail that might be relevant I always use DOCTYPE in the 1st line of my page (specifically I use the HTML 4.01 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/loose.dtd">). So I don't know if this solution works well when browser is in quirkmode (or not standard mode) due to lack of DOCTYPE or to a DOCTYPE that does not triggers Standard/Almost Standard mode.

1
  • 2
    Despite the answer being ten years old, it's still the right way to do this. postition:relative; keeps the browser from screwing up all the paragraph line-height assignments. This default behavior is so weird it strikes me as being a bug in rendering model of HTML.
    – serraosays
    Sep 15, 2020 at 15:29
4

If you are changing the font size, you might want to stop shrinking sizes with this rule:

sup sub, sub sup, sup sup, sub sub{font-size:1em !important;}
4

The CSS property font-variant-position is under consideration and may eventually be the answer to this question. As of early 2017, only Firefox supports it, though.

.super {
    font-variant-position: super;
}

See MDN.

1
  • 2
    It’s spring 2020 and still not supported by any browser but Firefox. Ah so…
    – Jens
    Apr 16, 2020 at 9:50
2

try

.aftersup {
 font-size: 1em;
 margin: left;
 vertical-align: .7em;
}

or plain "after"

.after {
 font-size: 1em;
 margin: left;
 vertical-align: .7em;
}

".a.external:after" could be simplified

or

.after {
 font-size: 50%;
 margin: left;
 vertical-align: .7em;
}

using "font size 50%" - 50% of what size? this might not work well if not used within some tag defining text size previous to superscript...

if you use "font-size: 1em;" then the font size is set for sure, without reference to a tag that defines link text size, unless link text is set at 100% and superscript is 50% of that 100%.

Using "font-size: 1em;" actually sets font size baseline.

Set "vertical-align" size smaller, if you want superscript font to be smaller than link text

Set "vertical-align" size same as font size, if you want superscript font to be same size as link text

To align with link text, you need to set "margin" same as link text (left, center, right, justified).

.text {
  font-size: 1em;
  margin: left;
}
.aftersup {
  font-size: 1em;
  margin: left;
  vertical-align: .7em;
}

It should be something like below example links with superscript

<p class="text"><a href="url">https://stackoverflow.com/questions/501671/superscript-in-css-only</a><aftersup>+</aftersup></p>

or

<p class="text"><a href="url">https://stackoverflow.com/questions/501671/superscript-in-css-only</a><aftersup>You got this</aftersup></p>

or

<a href="url">https://stackoverflow.com/questions/501671/superscript-in-css-only</a><aftersup>+</aftersup>

or

<a href="url">https://stackoverflow.com/questions/501671/superscript-in-css-only<aftersup>You got this</aftersup>

As in...

Superscript in CSS only?+

or

Superscript in CSS only?You got this

1

Check out: http://www.cssdesignpatterns.com/Chapter%2012%20-%20ALIGNING%20CONTENT/Vertical-aligned%20Content/example.html

if looks like you want "vertical-align:text-top"

1

I am not sure if this is related but I have solved my problem with &sup2; HTML entities as I wasn't able to add any other html tags inside a <label> tag. So the idea was using ASCII codes instead of css or HTML tags.

0
.superscript {
  position: relative;
  top: 5px;
  font-size: 90%;
  vertical-align: super;
}
0

Here's the exact way sup uses:

.superscript{
    vertical-align:super;
    font-size:smaller;
}

Found this via google chrome inspect element.

0

Related or maybe not related, using superscript as a HTML element or as a span+css in text might cause problem with localization - in localization programs.

For example let's say "3rd party software":

3<sup>rd</sup> party software
3<span class="superscript">rd</span> party software

How can translators translate "rd"? They can leave it empty for several cyrrilic languages, but what about of other exotic or RTL languages?

In this case it is better to avoid using superscripts and use a full wording like "third-party software". Or, as mentioned here in other comments, adding plus signs in superscript via jQuery.

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