I am working on a HTML/CSS template for invoices that get converted to pdf using wkhtmltopdf
. Part of the design is an element that looks the following way:
The text inside the element can be of variable length. The logic behind the element is fairly simple: whenever there is a line-break present decorate the end of the line with a wedge. I've added padding to each line using Matthew Pennell's Triple Element Method
as featured on css-tricks.com. I've adjusted it according to my needs:
.padded-multiline {
line-height: 1.4;
padding: 0.005in 0;
border-left: 0.16in solid #E7E7E9;
}
.padded-multiline p {
background-color: #E7E7E9;
padding: 0.02in 0;
display: inline;
margin: 0;
}
.padded-multiline p span {
position: relative;
left: -0.08in;
}
The problem is that I am not sure how to decorate the lines with the wedges. I would like a CSS solution but I'm not sure this can actually be achieved. Were the text single line I could fairly easily add a grey CSS triangle after the element. Or I could add a background image that would consist of a triangle on a white background which would achieve the same effect. But since the element is multiline I am running out of ideas.
Using background-repeat: repeat-y
on the nested elements doesn't seem to work the way I would expect as it only adds the background to the last line it.
I am aware that there is a ::first-line
pseudo-selector but from what I understand there's no ::nth-line
or other quantifiers of the same type.
At the moment I think the only viable solution might be using JavaScript to break the text into individual elements and treat them as multiple single-line elements rather than a multiline element. But I wanted to avoid using JavaScript as that adds more overhead to the PDF generation and also feels kind of hacky to me.
Any ideas?
Note:
wkhtmltopdf and wkhtmltoimage are open source (LGPLv3) command line tools to render HTML into PDF and various image formats using the Qt WebKit rendering engine.