A lot of developers tend to do the bare minimum when it comes to implementing proper website typography. This isn't an insult - I'm happy that typography is given any thought at all during development, I just believe more can always be done to improve upon it.

In today's TypeTip we're going to play around with the text-indent property, look into when it's best to use it and how to implement it properly.

The property and browser support

Browser support is actually pretty great for such a regularly over-looked CSS property. All major desktop and mobile browsers support it:

Text indent browser compatibility
Full support across all browsers.

Now that doesn't mean you should just slap this property on all your type elements and call it a day - there are specific use cases for text-indent and some basic rules to follow:

Use Cases

  1. Increasing readability of large text blocks that would otherwise overwhelm the reader
  2. Replicating book or report typography layouts

Basic Rules

  1. Best to set this property on inner type children only - meaning items like p or blockquotes instead of main headings
  2. When used on paragraph tags it's best to target only p elements that directly follow a sibling tag (see "The CSS" below)

The CSS

Adding the property is extremely trivial, all you need is the following:

/* Best practice for paragraphs */
p + p {
    text-indent: 1rem; /* whatever you want */
}

Let's see it in action

Live CodePen Example