The initial-value
CSS descriptor is required when using the @property
at-rule unless the syntax accepts any valid token stream. It sets the initial-value for the property.
The value chosen as the initial-value
must parse correctly according to the syntax definition. Therefore, if syntax is <color>
then the initial-value must be a valid color
value.
Syntax
@property --property-name {
syntax: "<color>";
inherits: false;
initial-value: #c0ffee;
}
@property --property-name {
syntax: "<color>";
inherits: true;
initial-value: #c0ffee;
}
Values
A string with a value which is a correct value for the chosen syntax
.
Examples
Add type checking to --my-color
custom property
, as a color, the initial-value being a valid color:
Using CSS @property
at-rule:
@property --my-color {
syntax: "<color>";
inherits: false;
initial-value: #c0ffee;
}
Using JavaScript CSS.registerProperty()
:
window.CSS.registerProperty({
name: "--my-color",
syntax: "<color>",
inherits: false,
initialValue: "#c0ffee",
});
Specifications
Browser compatibility
|
Desktop |
Mobile |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
Safari |
WebView Android |
Chrome Android |
Firefox for Android |
Opera Android |
Safari on IOS |
Samsung Internet |
initial-value |
85 |
85 |
preview |
No |
71 |
16.4 |
85 |
85 |
No |
60 |
16.4 |
14.0 |