An Initial Implementation of clip-path: path();

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Chris Coyier on (Updated on )

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One thing that has long surprised (and saddened) me is that the clip-path property, as awesome as it is, only takes a few values. The circle() and ellipse() functions are nice, but hiding overflows and rounding with border-radius generally helps there already. Perhaps the most useful value is polygon() because it allows us to draw a shape out of straight lines at arbitrary points.

Update: all three browser engines have clip-path: path() now. Yay!

Here’s a demo of each value:

The sad part comes in when you find out that clip-path doesn’t accept path(). C’mon it’s got path in the name! The path syntax, which comes from SVG, is the ultimate syntax. It allows us to draw literally any shape.

More confusingly, there already is a path() function, which is what properties like offset-path take.

I was once so flabbergasted by all this that I turned it into a full conference talk.

The talk goes into the shape-outside property and how it can’t use path(). It also goes into the fact that we can change the d property of a literal <path>.

I don’t really blame anyone, though. This is weird stuff and it’s being implemented by different teams, which inevitably results in different outcomes. Even the fact that SVG uses unit-less values in the <path d=""> syntax is a little weird and an anomaly in CSS-land. How that behaves, how values with units behave, what comma-syntax is allowed and disallowed, and what the DOM returns when asked is plenty to make your head spin.

Anyway! Along comes Firefox with an implementation!

Support

Here’s that flag in Firefox (layout.css.clip-path-path.enabled):

Update!

And here’s a demo…

you’ll see a square in unsupported browsers and a heart in the ones that support clip-path: path(); — which is only Firefox Nightly with the flag turned on at the time of this writing.

A screenshot of clip-path: path() working in Firefox Nightly

Now, all we need is:

  • clip-path to be able to point to the URL of a <path> in SVG, like url("#clip-path");
  • shape-outside to be able to use path()
  • shape-outside to be able to point to a <path>
  • offset-path to take all the other shape functions
  • Probably a bunch of specs to make sure this is all handled cleanly (Good luck, team!)
  • Browsers to implement it all

😉