Typography
Material Design's text sizes and styles were developed to balance content density and reading comfort under typical usage conditions.
MDC Typography is a foundational module that applies these styles to MDC Web components. The typographic styles in this module are derived from thirteen styles:
- Headline 1
- Headline 2
- Headline 3
- Headline 4
- Headline 5
- Headline 6
- Subtitle 1
- Subtitle 2
- Body 1
- Body 2
- Caption
- Button
- Overline
Design & API Documentation
Installation
npm install @material/typography
Basic Usage
HTML Structure
We recommend using Roboto from Google Fonts:
<head>
<link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto:300,400,500" rel="stylesheet">
</head>
<body class="mdc-typography">
<h1 class="mdc-typography--headline1">Big header</h1>
</body>
Styles
@use "@material/typography/mdc-typography";
Style Customization
Typography styles
The typography styles (referred to as <STYLE>
below) used in the type system:
Scale | Description |
---|
headline1 | The largest text on the screen, reserved for short, important text or numerals |
headline2 | Headline variant 2 |
headline3 | Headline variant 3 |
headline4 | Headline variant 4 |
headline5 | Headline variant 5 |
headline6 | Headline variant 6 |
subtitle1 | Smaller than headline, reserved for medium-emphasis text that is shorter in length |
subtitle2 | Subtitle variant 2 |
body1 | Used for long-form writing |
body2 | Body variant 2 |
caption | Used sparingly to annotate imagery |
button | A call to action used by different types of buttons |
overline | Used sparingly to introduce a headline |
CSS Classes
Some components have a set typographic style. For example, a raised MDC Card uses Body 1, Body 2, and Headline styles.
If you want to set the typographic style of an element, which is not a Material Design component, you can apply the following CSS classes.
CSS Class | Description |
---|
mdc-typography | Sets the font to Roboto |
mdc-typography--<STYLE> | Sets font properties as STYLE. Please see Typography styles section |
For example, the headline1
style as a CSS class would be mdc-typography--headline1
.
CSS Custom Properties
Sass Variables and Mixins
Mixin | Description |
---|
base | Sets the font to Roboto |
typography($style) | Applies one of the typography styles, including setting the font to Roboto |
smooth-font | Adds antialiasing for typography |
overflow-ellipsis | Truncates overflow text to one line with an ellipsis |
baseline($top, $bottom, $display) | Sets a container's baseline that text content will align to. |
zero-width-prefix | Adds an invisible, zero-width prefix to a container's text. This ensures that the baseline is always where the text would be, instead of defaulting to the container bottom when text is empty. Do not use this mixin if the baseline mixin is already applied. |
text-baseline($top, $bottom, $display) | Sets the baseline of flow text content. |
A note about overflow-ellipsis
, overflow-ellipsis
should only be used if the element is display: block
or display: inline-block
.
$style
Values
These styles can be used as the $style
argument for the mdc-typography
mixin.
headline1
headline2
headline3
headline4
headline5
headline6
subtitle1
subtitle2
body1
body2
caption
button
overline
Overriding Styles
All styles can be overridden using CSS custom properties or Sass module/global variables.
When using Sass module variables, the module must be configured before any other @use
statements with a variable named $styles-{style}
. The variable should be assigned to a map
that contains all the properties you want to override for a particular style.
When using Sass global variables, they must be defined before the component is imported by setting a global
variable named $mdc-typography-styles-{style}
.
Example: Overriding the button font-size
and text-transform
properties.
CSS custom properties:
html {
--mdc-typography-button-font-size: 16px;
--mdc-typography-button-text-transform: 16px;
}
Sass module variables:
@use "@material/typography" with (
$styles-button: (
font-size: 16px,
text-transform: none,
)
);
@use "@material/button";
@include button.core-styles;
Sass global variables:
$mdc-typography-styles-button: (
font-size: 16px,
text-transform: none,
);
@import "@material/button/mdc-button";
Example: Overriding the global font-family
property.
CSS custom properties:
html {
--mdc-typography-font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
}
Sass module variables:
@use "@material/typography" with (
$font-family: unquote("Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif")
);
@use "@material/button";
@include button.core-styles;
Sass global variables:
$mdc-typography-font-family: unquote("Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif");
@import "@material/button/mdc-button";
Example: Overriding the font-family
property for headline1
and font-family
and font-size
for headline2
.
CSS custom properties:
html {
--mdc-typography-headline1-font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
--mdc-typography-headline2-font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;
--mdc-typography-headline2-font-size: 3.25rem;
}
Sass module variables:
@use "@material/typography" with (
$styles-headline1: (
$font-family: unquote("Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif")
),
$styles-headline2: (
$font-family: unquote("Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"),
$font-size: 3.25rem
)
);
@use ...
Sass global variables:
$mdc-typography-styles-headline1: (
font-family: unquote("Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif")
);
$mdc-typography-styles-headline2: (
font-family: unquote("Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif"),
font-size: 3.25rem
);
@import ...