Wrap text with a `.text-wrap` class.
-<Example code={`<div class="badge text-bg-primary text-wrap" style="width: 6rem;">
- This text should wrap.
+<Example code={`<div class="text-wrap bg-body-secondary border" style="width: 8rem;">
+ This snippet of text should wrap.
</div>`} />
Prevent text from wrapping with a `.text-nowrap` class.
This text should overflow the parent.
</div>`} />
+Use `.text-balance` to balance evenly distribute text across multiple lines. This is computationally expensive and is thus limited by the Chromium to six lines and by Firefox to ten lines.
+
+<Example code={`<div class="text-balance mx-auto" style="width: 20rem;">
+ This text should be balanced. Here we’re writing a longer snippet of text to form a paragraph and demonstrate how the text wraps.
+ </div>`} />
+
+Use `.text-pretty` to prevent single words their own line (orphans). **Pretty text wrapping is not fully supported in Safari and Firefox at the moment.**
+
+<Example code={`<div class="text-pretty mx-auto" style="width: 20rem;">
+ This text should be pretty. Here we’re writing a longer snippet of text to form a paragraph and demonstrate how the text wraps.
+ </div>`} />
+
## Word break
Prevent long strings of text from breaking your components’ layout by using `.text-break` to set `word-wrap: break-word` and `word-break: break-word`. We use `word-wrap` instead of the more common `overflow-wrap` for wider browser support, and add the deprecated `word-break: break-word` to avoid issues with flex containers.