Cascade Style Sheets

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Cascade Style Sheets (CSS)

A CSS is made up of two parts: the selector and declaration. The selector states which tag the rule applies. The declaration stats what happens when the rule is applied.

The declaration is made up of two elements: a property and value. A declaration must end with a semicolon.

Multiple declarations can be contained in a single rule.

Multiple selectors can be contained in a single rule. A comma must be used after each selector except the last.

h1, h2, h3 {color:red; font-weight:bold;}

Multiple rules can be applied to the same selector.

h1, h2, h3 {color:red; font-weight:bold;}

h3 {font-style:italic;}

Contextual Selectors

Contextual selectors use more than one tag in the selector. The tag closest to the declaration is the targeted tag. The additional tag(s) state where the target tag must be located in the markup up in order for target tag to be affected. Contextual selectors have spaces between them.

Contextual selector examples

<html>
<head>
	<title>Contextual Selector Example 1</title>
	<link href="style_sheets/contextual_selector_example_1.css" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
</head>
<body>

=== Contextual Class Selectors ===

You can combine tag and class name to make a selector more specific.

The second line states '''any tags with "specialtext" class will be bold'''.

The third line states '''p tags with "specialtext" class will be red'''.

<pre>
p { font-family: Helvetica, sans-serif; }
.specialtext { font-weight:bold; }
p.specialtext { color:red}

| Class Selector Example 0

You can further specify by adding more tags.

The fourth line states span tag within a paragraph with "specialtext" class will be italicized

p { font-family: Helvetica, sans-serif; }
.specialtext { font-weight:bold; }
p.specialtext { color:red}
p.specialtext span { font-style:italic; }

| Class Selector Example 1


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