CSS The object-fit Property
The CSS object-fit
property is used to specify how an
<img> or <video> should be resized to fit its container.
Browser Support
The numbers in the table specify the first browser version that fully supports the property.
Property | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
object-fit | 31.0 | 16.0 | 36.0 | 7.1 | 19.0 |
The CSS object-fit Property
The CSS object-fit
property is used to specify how an <img> or <video> should
be resized to fit its container.
This property tells the content to fill the container in a variety of ways; such as "preserve that aspect ratio" or "stretch up and take up as much space as possible".
Look at the following image from Paris, which is 400x300 pixels:
However, if we style the image above to be 200x400 pixels, it will look like this:
We see that the image is being squeezed to fit the container of 200x400 pixels, and its original aspect ratio is destroyed.
If we use object-fit: cover;
it will cut off the sides of the image,
preserving the aspect ratio, and also filling in the space, like this:
Another Example
Here we have two images and we want them to fill the width of 50% of the browser window and 100% of the height.
In the following example we do NOT use object-fit
, so when we resize the browser window, the aspect ratio of the images will be destroyed:
In the next example, we use object-fit: cover;
, so when we resize the browser window, the aspect ratio of the images
is preserved:
All Values of The CSS object-fit Property
The object-fit
property can have the
following values:
fill
- This is default. The replaced content is sized to fill the element's content box. If necessary, the object will be stretched or squished to fitcontain
- The replaced content is scaled to maintain its aspect ratio while fitting within the element's content boxcover
- The replaced content is sized to maintain its aspect ratio while filling the element's entire content box. The object will be clipped to fitnone
- The replaced content is not resizedscale-down
- The content is sized as if none or contain were specified (would result in a smaller concrete object size)
The following example demonstrates all the possible values of the object-fit
property:
Example
.fill {object-fit: fill;}
.contain {object-fit: contain;}
.cover {object-fit: cover;}
.scale-down {object-fit: scale-down;}
.none {object-fit: none;}
Try it Yourself »