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How Do I Avoid A Page Break Immediately After A Heading

I have an HTML 4.01/CSS 2.1 document that includes an H3 heading followed by a short (one line) paragraph block and then an unordered list with several items:

Heading!<

Solution 1:

This is an extremely hacky solution, but it works for me:

h1 {
    page-break-inside: avoid;
}
h1::after {
    content: "";
    display: block;
    height: 100px;
    margin-bottom: -100px;
}

Basically I create an invisible element that increases the size of the <h1> without affecting the content after it. When page-break-inside: avoid is applied and the whole <h1> (including the hacky element cannot fit into the page) the browser is forced to carry the <h1> to the next page.

Solution 2:

Since the CSS property page-break-after: avoid doesn't work in any WebKit or Mozilla based browsers, use the page-break-inside: avoid over the heading and an acceptable amount of the text:

CSS

<styletype="text/css">.nobreak {
        page-break-inside: avoid;
    }
</style>

HTML

<divclass="nobreak"><h3>Heading!</h3><p>Some things:</p></div><ul><li>Thing one</li><li>Thing B</li><li>Thing 4</li></ul>

Solution 3:

If you used HTML 5 <article> and <header>, here's a hack that seems to work with Webkit, Blink and Gecko (tweak the value 8rem to match your needs):

article > header::before
{
    content: "";
    display: block;
    height: 8rem; /* pretend that the header is at least 8rem high so this header cannot fit near the end of page */margin-bottom: -8rem; /* however, reduce the margin the same amount so that the following content can stay in its usual place */page-break-inside: avoid;
    break-inside: avoid;
}

This works because pseudoelement ::before is rendered downwards from top of the header and browsers do support page-break-inside: avoid; well enough to actually reserve the space at the end of the page. It also uses the fact that browsers consider the height without margins when the space required is actually measured. I don't know if this is specified in any spec or just happens to match the real world browser behavior.

Some of the other answers suggest using ::after instead but in my experience that may result in cases where the container element <article> starts to render on the previous page. Using ::before seems to work better and the start of container element also seems to move. Obviously, the difference doesn't matter if your containing element doesn't have visible edges.

Note that because you have exactly one pseudo-element ::before you might not be able to use this hack if you want to apply some other styles for ::before. This hack requires that the ::before is rendered under the other content but transparent so it cannot contain visible content.

Additional things to consider:

  • The page-break nor page-break-inside do not work inside tables (display:table), display:grid nor display:flex. It's still unknown if this is caused by partial browser implementation or due CSS specification actually requiring this. In practice you need to use display:block for all the parent elements up to <html> or page breaks will happen anywhere.
  • You cannot limit the reserved space to height of full container element. For example, if the whole <article> in the above example is less than 8rem high, the element will still skip to next page because this hack blindly reserves space for 8rem before even trying to fit the <article> on the page.

However, in practice this works better than break-after:avoid or page-break-after:avoid due real world browser support. Also, the support for widows and orphans is really poor, so you may want to apply similar hack for <p> element, too. I would suggest 2rem or 3rem space for those.

Solution 4:

When dealing only with lines inside a Paragraph, you could use the widows and orphans attributes in CSS. But unfortunately this will not bind your header to the Paragraph or the List. This because widows and orphans are not applied on block-like elements (like headers). See Should CSS "orphan" operate at line or block level?

I tried it since I've got stuck with the same problem. It seems to work when I print the Page from the Browser (Opera in my case) but not when I export the PDF with wkhtmltopdf.

Looks like putting all the elements that we don't want to be separated into a div and style this one with page-break-inside: avoid, like suggested in the accepted answer.

In my case where I have to display some headers and tabular data, I had to build a routine that finds the headers and then counts a certain amount of table-rows ahead and relocates the header and the table(s) into one div.

Solution 5:

I recently worked on the pdf download story which was having dynamic rows of data in table format which include various charts images(tech used=>Angular + Spring + Thymleaf + Puppeteer) Some of the key points for handling page-breaks

Try to use <div></div>blocks instead of HTML tables

Do not use display: flex on the parent container on which you want page-break-inside: avoid(use float in child element)

.child1{ float: left; }

3.If you are rendering div in loop and page-break-inside: avoid; not working You should use this CSS hack to work on a particular div

<div class="parent-container">
<divclass="child1"></div><divclass="child2"></div>
</div>
.parent-container{
 position: relative;
 page-break-inside: avoid;
} 
.parent-container::after {
content: "";
display: block;
height: 200px;
margin-bottom: -200px;
}

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