This defines a flex container; inline or block depending on the given value. It enables a flex context for all its direct children.
.container {
display: flex;
}
This establishes the main-axis, thus defining the direction flex items are placed in the flex container. Flexbox is (aside from optional wrapping) a single-direction layout concept. Think of flex items as primarily laying out either in horizontal rows or vertical columns.
.container {
flex-direction: row | row-reverse | column | column-reverse;
}
By default, flex items will all try to fit onto one line. You can change that and allow the items to wrap as needed with this property.
.container {
flex-wrap: nowrap | wrap | wrap-reverse;
}
This is a shorthand for the flex-direction and flex-wrap properties, which together define the flex container’s main and cross axes. The default value is row nowrap.
.container {
flex-flow: column wrap;
}
This defines the alignment along the main axis. It helps distribute extra free space leftover when either all the flex items on a line are inflexible, or are flexible but have reached their maximum size. It also exerts some control over the alignment of items when they overflow the line.
.container {
justify-content: flex-start | flex-end | center | space-between | space-around | space-evenly | start | end | left | right ... + safe | unsafe;
}
This defines the default behavior for how flex items are laid out along the cross axis on the current line. Think of it as the justify-content version for the cross-axis (perpendicular to the main-axis).
.container {
align-items: stretch | flex-start | flex-end | center | baseline | first baseline | last baseline | start | end | self-start | self-end + ... safe | unsafe;
}
This aligns a flex container’s lines within when there is extra space in the cross-axis, similar to how justify-content aligns individual items within the main-axis.
.container {
align-content: flex-start | flex-end | center | space-between | space-around | space-evenly | stretch | start | end | baseline | first baseline | last baseline + ... safe | unsafe;
}
The gap property explicitly controls the space between flex items. It applies that spacing only between items not on the outer edges.
.container {
display: flex;
...
gap: 10px;
gap: 10px 20px; /* row-gap column gap */
row-gap: 10px;
column-gap: 20px;
}
By default, flex items are laid out in the source order. However, the order property controls the order in which they appear in the flex container.
.item {
order: 5;
}
This defines the ability for a flex item to grow if necessary. It accepts a unitless value that serves as a proportion. It dictates what amount of the available space inside the flex container the item should take up.
If all items have flex-grow set to 1, the remaining space in the container will be distributed equally to all children. If one of the children has a value of 2, that child would take up twice as much of the space either one of the others (or it will try, at least).
.item {
flex-grow: 4; /* default 0 */
}
This defines the ability for a flex item to shrink if necessary.
.item {
flex-shrink: 3; /* default 1 */
}
This defines the default size of an element before the remaining space is distributed. It can be a length (e.g. 20%, 5rem, etc.) or a keyword. The auto keyword means “look at my width or height property” (which was temporarily done by the main-size keyword until deprecated). The content keyword means “size it based on the item’s content” – this keyword isn’t well supported yet, so it’s hard to test and harder to know what its brethren max-content, min-content, and fit-content do.
.item {
flex-basis: | auto; /* default auto */
}
This allows the default alignment (or the one specified by align-items) to be overridden for individual flex items.
.item {
align-self: auto | flex-start | flex-end | center | baseline | stretch;
}