CSS perspective Property


Example

Give a 3D-positioned element some perspective:

#div1 {
  perspective: 100px;
}
Try it Yourself »

More "Try it Yourself" examples below.


Definition and Usage

The perspective property is used to give a 3D-positioned element some perspective.

The perspective property defines how far the object is away from the user. So, a lower value will result in a more intensive 3D effect than a higher value.

When defining the perspective property for an element, it is the CHILD elements that get the perspective view, NOT the element itself.

Tip: Also look at the perspective-origin property, which defines at which position the user is looking at the 3D object.

To better understand the perspective property, view a demo.

Show demo ❯

Default value: none
Inherited: no
Animatable: yes. Read about animatable Try it
Version: CSS3
JavaScript syntax: object.style.perspective="50px" Try it

Browser Support

The numbers in the table specify the first browser version that fully supports the property.

Numbers followed by -webkit- or -moz- specify the first version that worked with a prefix.

Property
perspective 36.0
12.0 -webkit-
10.0 16.0
10.0 -moz-
9.0
4.0.3 -webkit-
23.0
15.0 -webkit-


CSS Syntax

perspective: length|none;

Property Values

Property Value Description Demo
length How far the element is placed from the view Demo ❯
none Default value. Same as 0. The perspective is not set Demo ❯
initial Sets this property to its default value. Read about initial
inherit Inherits this property from its parent element. Read about inherit

More Examples

Example

Create a cube and set different perspectives:

.ex1 {
  perspective: 800px;
}

.ex2 {
  perspective: 150px;
}
Try it Yourself »

Related Pages

CSS tutorial: CSS 3D Transforms

HTML DOM reference: perspective property


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