How to Make A Chevron Arrow Using CSS?
This can be solved much easier than the other suggestions.
Simply draw a square and apply a border
property to just 2 joining sides.
Then rotate the square according to the direction you want the arrow to point, for exaple: transform: rotate(<your degree here>)
.triangle {
border-right: 10px solid;
border-bottom: 10px solid;
height: 30px;
width: 30px;
transform: rotate(-45deg);
}
<div class="triangle"></div>
You can use the before
or after
pseudo-element and apply some CSS to it. There are various ways. You can add both before
and after
, and rotate and position each of them to form one of the bars. An easier solution is adding two borders to just the before
element and rotate it using transform: rotate
.
Scroll down for a different solution that uses an actual element instead of the pseuso elements
In this case, I've added the arrows as bullets in a list and used em
sizes to make them size properly with the font of the list.
ul {
list-style: none;
}
ul.big {
list-style: none;
font-size: 300%
}
li::before {
position: relative;
/* top: 3pt; Uncomment this to lower the icons as requested in comments*/
content: "";
display: inline-block;
/* By using an em scale, the arrows will size with the font */
width: 0.4em;
height: 0.4em;
border-right: 0.2em solid black;
border-top: 0.2em solid black;
transform: rotate(45deg);
margin-right: 0.5em;
}
/* Change color */
li:hover {
color: red; /* For the text */
}
li:hover::before {
border-color: red; /* For the arrow (which is a border) */
}
<ul>
<li>Item1</li>
<li>Item2</li>
<li>Item3</li>
<li>Item4</li>
</ul>
<ul class="big">
<li>Item1</li>
<li>Item2</li>
<li>Item3</li>
<li>Item4</li>
</ul>
Of course you don't need to use before
or after
, you can apply the same trick to a normal element as well. For the list above it is convenient, because you don't need additional markup. But sometimes you may want (or need) the markup anyway. You can use a div
or span
for that, and I've even seen people even recycle the i
element for 'icons'. So that markup could look like below. Whether using <i>
for this is right is debatable, but you can use span for this as well to be on the safe side.
/* Default icon formatting */
i {
display: inline-block;
font-style: normal;
position: relative;
}
/* Additional formatting for arrow icon */
i.arrow {
/* top: 2pt; Uncomment this to lower the icons as requested in comments*/
width: 0.4em;
height: 0.4em;
border-right: 0.2em solid black;
border-top: 0.2em solid black;
transform: rotate(45deg);
}
And so you can have an <i class="arrow" title="arrow icon"></i> in your text.
This arrow is <i class="arrow" title="arrow icon"></i> used to be deliberately lowered slightly on request.
I removed that for the general public <i class="arrow" title="arrow icon"></i> but you can uncomment the line with 'top' <i class="arrow" title="arrow icon"></i> to restore that effect.
If you seek more inspiration, make sure to check out this awesome library of pure CSS icons by Nicolas Gallagher. :)