CSS user-select property determines whether text can be selected by the user, with no effect on content loaded as part of a browser’s user interface (chrome) other than textboxes.
While user-select is not inherited, its initial “auto” value often makes it behave as if it is inherited. WebKit/Chromium-based browsers implement the property as inherited, which violates the specification and will cause problems. Chromium has been resolving these problems to align with the specified behavior.
Possible Values
- none − The element’s and sub-elements’ text is not selectable, but these elements may be present in the Selection object.
- auto − The auto value is determined as follows:
- The value used for the ::before and ::after pseudo-elements is none.
- For editable elements, the used value is contain.
- If the parent of this element has a user-select value all, then the used value is all.
- If the parent of this element has a user-select value none, then the used value is none.
- The used value is text.
- text − The user can select the text.
- contain − Allows the selection to begin within the element, but contains the selection to the boundaries of that element.
- all − The content of the element must be selected atomically: If a selection contains part of an element, it must also include all of its descendants. If a double-click or context-click happens in a sub-element, the highest ancestor with this value will be chosen.
Applies To
All elements.
Syntax
user-select: none | auto | text | contain | all;
CSS user-select – none Value
The following example demonstrates the user-select: none property preventing users from selecting the text −
<html><head><style>
.text-none {
-webkit-user-select: none;
user-select: none;
}
</style></head><body><p>This text should be selectable.</p><p class="text-none">This text cannot be selected.</p></body></html>
CSS user-select – auto Value
The following example demonstrates the user-select: auto property used to select the text −
<html><head><style>
p {
-webkit-user-select: auto;
user-select: auto;
}
</style></head><body><p>This text should be selectable.</p></body></html>
CSS user-select – text Value
The following example demonstrates the user-select: text property allows the users to select the text −
<html><head><style>
p {
-webkit-user-select: text;
user-select: text;
}
</style></head><body><p>This text should be selectable.</p></body></html>
CSS user-select – all Value
The following example demonstrates the user-select: all property allows the users to select the text within a single click −
<html><head><style>
p {
-webkit-user-select: all;
user-select: all;
}
</style></head><body><p>This text can be selected with a single click.</p></body></html>
CSS user-select – contain Value
The following example demonstrates the user-select: contain property allows the users to select the text within the paragraph’s boundaries −
<html><head><style>
p {
-webkit-user-select: contain;
user-select: contain;
}
</style></head><body><p>This text can be selected within the paragraph's boundaries.</p></body></html>
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