Summary

This document provides an introduction to Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) for web development. It covers basic CSS syntax, selectors, and how CSS is used to style HTML elements.

Full Transcript

INTODUCTION TO CSS CSS is the language we use to style a Web page. What is CSS? CSS stands for Cascading Style Sheets CSS describes how HTML elements are to be displayed on screen, paper, or in other media CSS saves a lot of work. It can control the layout of multiple...

INTODUCTION TO CSS CSS is the language we use to style a Web page. What is CSS? CSS stands for Cascading Style Sheets CSS describes how HTML elements are to be displayed on screen, paper, or in other media CSS saves a lot of work. It can control the layout of multiple web pages all at once External stylesheets are stored in CSS files. Why Use CSS? CSS is used to define styles for your web pages, including the design, layout and variations in display for different devices and screen sizes. A CSS rule consists of a selector and a declaration block. CSS Syntax The selector points to the HTML element you want to style. The declaration block contains one or more declarations separated by semicolons. Each declaration includes a CSS property name and a value, separated by a colon. MultipleCSS declarations are separated with semicolons, and declaration blocks are surrounded by curly braces. Example In this example all elements will be center aligned, with a red text color: CODE: OUTPUT: Example Explained p is a selector in CSS (it points to the HTML element you want to style: ). color is a property, and red is the property value. text-align is a property, and center is the property value. A CSS selector selects the HTML element(s) you want to style CSS Selectors CSS selectors are used to "find" (or select) the HTML elements you want to style. CSS selectors can be divided into five categories: Simple selectors (select elements based on name, id, class) Combinator selectors (select elements based on a specific relationship between them) Pseudo-class selectors (select elements based on a certain state) Pseudo-elements selectors (select and style a part of an element) Attribute selectors (select elements based on an attribute or attribute value) The CSS element Selector Example All elements on the page will be center-aligned, with a red text color: The CSS id Selector The id selector uses the id attribute of an HTML element to select a specific element. The id of an element is unique within a page, so the id selector is used to select one unique element! To select an element with a specific id, write a hash (#) character, followed by the id of the element. Example The CSS rule below will be applied to the HTML element with id="para1": The CSS class Selector The class selector selects HTML elements with a specific class attribute. To select elements with a specific class, write a period (.) character, followed by the class name. Example All HTML elements with class="center" will be red and center-aligned: Youcan also specify that only specific HTML elements should be affected by a class. Example Only elements with class="center" will be red and center-aligned: HTML elements can also refer to more than one class Example The element will be styled according to class="center" and to class="large": The CSS Universal Selector The universal selector (*) selects all HTML elements on the page. Example The CSS rule below will affect every HTML element on the page: The CSS Grouping Selector The grouping selector selects all the HTML elements with the same style definitions. Look at the following CSS code (the h1, h2, and p elements have the same style definitions): h1 { text-align: center; color: red; } h2 { text-align: center; color: red; } p{ text-align: center; color: red; } It will be better to group the selectors, to minimize the code. To group selectors, separate each selector with a comma. Example In this example we have grouped the selectors from the code above:

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser