> Even this one CSS directive has already been supported by Chrome for two years
The article says what chrome does is only support the “no super short lines” bit.
So while you won’t end up with one word on its own line at the end of a paragraph, it’s not trying to prevent rivers of text or keep a relatively clean ragged right or anything else.
That’s allowed by spec, but it’s not quite the same thing.
The article says what chrome does is only support the “no super short lines” bit.
So while you won’t end up with one word on its own line at the end of a paragraph, it’s not trying to prevent rivers of text or keep a relatively clean ragged right or anything else.
That’s allowed by spec, but it’s not quite the same thing.