CSS Styling text areas like notebook-look

It is possible to style a text area so each row have a dotted underline (like a notebook or a notes-block)?

The number of lines should be fixed to lets say 10.


Solution 1:

Here's probably what you looking for:

line

<style type="text/css">
textarea {
 background: url(http://i.stack.imgur.com/ynxjD.png) repeat-y;
 width: 600px;
 height: 300px;
 font: normal 14px verdana;
 line-height: 25px;
 padding: 2px 10px;
 border: solid 1px #ddd;
}

</style>
<textarea>
    Textarea with style example
    Line 1
    Line 2
    Line 3
    Line 4
    Line 5
    Line 6
    Line 7
    Line n
</textarea>

Or you can read this articles that tells you how to do it from scratch:

Creating a Notebook Background

Solution 2:

Pure CSS3

<style>
    html{ height: 100%; }
    body
    {
        background-color: #f5f5f5;
    }
    textarea
    {
        border: 1px solid #EEEEEE;
        box-shadow: 1px 1px 0 #DDDDDD;
        display: block;
        font-family: 'Marck Script',cursive;
        font-size: 22px;
        line-height: 50px;
        margin: 2% auto;
        padding: 11px 20px 0 70px;
        resize: none;
        height: 689px;
        width: 530px;

        background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(top , transparent, transparent 49px,#E7EFF8 0px), -moz-radial-gradient(4% 50%, circle closest-corner, #f5f5f5, #f5f5f5 39%, transparent 0%), -moz-radial-gradient(3.9% 46% , circle closest-corner, #CCCCCC, #CCCCCC 43.5%, transparent 0%); 
        background-image: -webkit-linear-gradient(top , transparent, transparent 49px,#E7EFF8 0), -webkit-radial-gradient(4% 50%, circle closest-corner, #f5f5f5, #f5f5f5 39%, transparent 0%), -webkit-radial-gradient(3.9% 46%, circle closest-corner, #cccccc, #cccccc 43.5%, transparent 0%);

        -webkit-background-size:  100% 50px;
        background-size: 100% 50px;
    }
</style>

the result you can see this link: http://jsfiddle.net/Wolfsblvt/qc9rgm7r/

Solution 3:

I took the other answer and upgraded it to SCSS to make it configurable. You can now easily change size and color of the holes and rules and everything will size accordingly.

Also, I added another example that uses an editable div instead of a textarea.

example

jsfiddle

// rule config
$rule-height: 20px; // <-- primary parameter

   $font-size: min(max($rule-height - 9, 8pt), 13pt);
   $rule-mask-height: $rule-height - 1;
   $rule-padding-top: $rule-height + 2;
   $rule-padding-right: $rule-height;
   $rule-padding-left: $rule-height * 2;

// colors
$hole-fill-color: #f5f5f5;
$hole-shadow: #CCCCCC;
$paper-color: #FFFFFF;
$line-color: #E7EFF8;

Unfortunately, Stackoverflow doesn't support SCSS, so I just included a snapshot of one fixed configuration here:

@import url("https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Reenie+Beanie");

html { height: 100%; }
body { background-color: #f5f5f5; }

.editable {
  color: #000000;
  border: 1px solid #EEEEEE;
  box-shadow: 1px 1px 0 #DDDDDD;
  display: inline-block;
  vertical-align: top;
  /*font-family: 'Marck Script', cursive;*/
  font-family: 'Reenie Beanie', cursive;
  font-size: 24px;
  line-height: 20px;
  margin: 2% auto;
  padding: 22px 20px 3px 40px;
  resize: none;
  min-height: 200px;
  width: 300px;
  background-color: #FFFFFF;
  background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(top, transparent, transparent 19px, #E7EFF8 0px), -moz-radial-gradient(4% 50%, circle closest-corner, #f5f5f5, #f5f5f5 39%, transparent 0%), -moz-radial-gradient(3.9% 46%, circle closest-corner, #CCCCCC, #CCCCCC 43.5%, transparent 0%);
  background-image: -webkit-linear-gradient(top, transparent, transparent 19px, #E7EFF8 0), -webkit-radial-gradient(4% 50%, circle closest-corner, #f5f5f5, #f5f5f5 39%, transparent 0%), -webkit-radial-gradient(3.9% 46%, circle closest-corner, #CCCCCC, #CCCCCC 43.5%, transparent 0%);
  -webkit-background-size: 100% 20px;
  background-size: 100% 20px;
}
<textarea class="editable">Textarea: This is the first line.
See, how the text fits here, also if there is a linebreak at the end? It works nicely.

  Great.
</textarea>

<div class="editable" contenteditable>Editable div: This is the first line.<br>
  See, how the text fits here, also if there is a linebreak at the end?<br>
  It works nicely.<br>
  <br>
  Great.
</div>