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| diff --git a/css.html.markdown b/css.html.markdown index 9e8664b3..d8f30ca3 100644 --- a/css.html.markdown +++ b/css.html.markdown @@ -4,25 +4,21 @@ contributors:      - ["Mohammad Valipour", "https://github.com/mvalipour"]      - ["Marco Scannadinari", "https://github.com/marcoms"]      - ["Geoffrey Liu", "https://github.com/g-liu"] +    - ["Connor Shea", "https://github.com/connorshea"] +    - ["Deepanshu Utkarsh", "https://github.com/duci9y"]  filename: learncss.css  --- -In early days of web there was no visual elements, just pure text. But with the   -further development of browser fully visual web pages also became common.    -CSS is the standard language that exists to keep the separation between    -the content (HTML) and the look-and-feel of web pages. +In the early days of the web there were no visual elements, just pure text. But with further development of web browsers, fully visual web pages also became common. -In short, what CSS does is to provide a syntax that enables you to target    -different elements on an HTML page and assign different visual properties to them. +CSS helps maintain separation between the content (HTML) and the look-and-feel of a web page. -Like any other language, CSS has many versions. Here we focus on CSS2.0    -which is not the most recent but the most widely supported and compatible version. +CSS lets you target different elements on an HTML page and assign different visual properties to them. -**NOTE:** Because the outcome of CSS is some visual effects, in order to  -learn it, you need try all different things in a  -CSS playground like [dabblet](http://dabblet.com/). -The main focus of this article is on the syntax and some general tips. +This guide has been written for CSS 2, though CSS 3 is fast becoming popular. +**NOTE:** Because CSS produces visual results, in order to learn it, you need try everything in a CSS playground like [dabblet](http://dabblet.com/). +The main focus of this article is on the syntax and some general tips.  ```css  /* comments appear inside slash-asterisk, just like this line! @@ -32,92 +28,103 @@ The main focus of this article is on the syntax and some general tips.     ## SELECTORS     #################### */ -/* Generally, the primary statement in CSS is very simple */ +/* the selector is used to target an element on a page.  selector { property: value; /* more properties...*/ } -/* the selector is used to target an element on page. - -You can target all elements on the page using asterisk! */ -* { color:red; } -  /* -Given an element like this on the page: +Here is an example element: -<div class='some-class class2' id='someId' attr='value' otherAttr='en-us foo bar' /> +<div class='class1 class2' id='anID' attr='value' otherAttr='en-us foo bar' />  */ -/* you can target it by its name */ -.some-class { } +/* You can target it using one of its CSS classes */ +.class1 { } -/* or by both classes! */ -.some-class.class2 { } +/* or both classes! */ +.class1.class2 { } -/* or by its element name */ +/* or its name */  div { }  /* or its id */ -#someId { } +#anID { } -/* or by the fact that it has an attribute! */ +/* or using the fact that it has an attribute! */  [attr] { font-size:smaller; }  /* or that the attribute has a specific value */  [attr='value'] { font-size:smaller; } -/* start with a value (CSS3) */ +/* starts with a value (CSS 3) */  [attr^='val'] { font-size:smaller; } -/* or ends with (CSS3) */ +/* or ends with a value (CSS 3) */  [attr$='ue'] { font-size:smaller; } -/* or select by one of the values from the whitespace separated list (CSS3) */ -[otherAttr~='foo'] { font-size:smaller; } +/* or contains a value in a space-separated list */ +[otherAttr~='foo'] { } +[otherAttr~='bar'] { } -/* or value can be exactly “value” or can begin with “value” immediately followed by “-” (U+002D) */ +/* or contains a value in a dash-separated list, ie, "-" (U+002D) */  [otherAttr|='en'] { font-size:smaller; } -/* and more importantly you can combine these together -- there shouldn't be   -any space between different parts because that makes it to have another   -meaning. */ +/* You can concatenate different selectors to create a narrower selector. Don't +   put spaces between them. */  div.some-class[attr$='ue'] { } -/* you can also select an element based on its parent. */ +/* You can select an element which is a child of another element */ +div.some-parent > .class-name { } + +/* or a descendant of another element. Children are the direct descendants of +   their parent element, only one level down the tree. Descendants can be any +   level down the tree. */ +div.some-parent .class-name { } + +/* Warning: the same selector without a space has another meaning. +   Can you guess what? */ +div.some-parent.class-name { } + +/* You may also select an element based on its adjacent sibling */ +.i-am-just-before + .this-element { } + +/* or any sibling preceding it */ +.i-am-any-element-before ~ .this-element { } -/* an element which is direct child of an element (selected the same way) */ -div.some-parent > .class-name {} +/* There are some selectors called pseudo classes that can be used to select an +   element when it is in a particular state */ -/* or any of its parents in the tree -   the following basically means any element that has class "class-name"   -   and is child of a div with class name "some-parent" IN ANY DEPTH */ -div.some-parent .class-name {} +/* for example, when the cursor hovers over an element */ +selector:hover { } -/* warning: the same selector without space has another meaning.   -   can you say what? */ -div.some-parent.class-name {} +/* or a link has been visited */ +selector:visited { } -/* you also might choose to select an element based on its direct   -   previous sibling */ -.i-am-before + .this-element { } +/* or hasn't been visited */ +selected:link { } -/* or any sibling before this */ -.i-am-any-before ~ .this-element {} +/* or an element in focus */ +selected:focus { } -/* There are some pseudo classes that allows you to select an element   -   based on its page behaviour (rather than page structure) */ +/* any element that is the first child of its parent */ +selector:first-child {} -/* for example for when an element is hovered */ -selector:hover {} +/* any element that is the last child of its parent */ +selector:last-child {} -/* or a visited link */ -selected:visited {} +/* Just like pseudo classes, pseudo elements allow you to style certain parts of a document  */ -/* or not visited link */ -selected:link {} +/* matches a virtual first child of the selected element */ +selector::before {} -/* or an input element which is focused */ -selected:focus {} +/* matches a virtual last child of the selected element */ +selector::after {} +/* At appropriate places, an asterisk may be used as a wildcard to select every +   element */ +* { } /* all elements */ +.parent * { } /* all descendants */ +.parent > * { } /* all children */  /* ####################     ## PROPERTIES @@ -125,123 +132,122 @@ selected:focus {}  selector { -    /* Units */ -    width: 50%; /* in percent */ -    font-size: 2em; /* times current font-size */ -    width: 200px; /* in pixels */ -    font-size: 20pt; /* in points */ -    width: 5cm; /* in centimeters */ -    min-width: 50mm; /* in millimeters */ -    max-width: 5in; /* in inches. max-(width|height) */ -    height: 0.2vh; /* times vertical height of browser viewport (CSS3) */ -    width: 0.4vw; /* times horizontal width of browser viewport (CSS3) */ -    min-height: 0.1vmin; /* the lesser of vertical, horizontal dimensions of browser viewport (CSS3) */ -    max-width: 0.3vmax; /* same as above, except the greater of the dimensions (CSS3) */ +    /* Units of length can be absolute or relative. */ +     +    /* Relative units */ +    width: 50%;       /* percentage of parent element width */ +    font-size: 2em;   /* multiples of element's original font-size */ +    font-size: 2rem;  /* or the root element's font-size */ +    font-size: 2vw;   /* multiples of 1% of the viewport's width (CSS 3) */ +    font-size: 2vh;   /* or its height */ +    font-size: 2vmin; /* whichever of a vh or a vw is smaller */ +    font-size: 2vmax; /* or greater */ +     +    /* Absolute units */ +    width: 200px;     /* pixels */ +    font-size: 20pt;  /* points */ +    width: 5cm;       /* centimeters */ +    min-width: 50mm;  /* millimeters */ +    max-width: 5in;   /* inches */      /* Colors */ -    background-color: #F6E;  /* in short hex */ -    background-color: #F262E2; /* in long hex format */ -    background-color: tomato; /* can be a named color */ -    background-color: rgb(255, 255, 255); /* in rgb */ -    background-color: rgb(10%, 20%, 50%); /* in rgb percent */ -    background-color: rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.3); /* in semi-transparent rgb (CSS3) */ -    background-color: transparent; /* see thru */ -    background-color: hsl(0, 100%, 50%); /* hsl format (CSS3). */ -    background-color: hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.3); /* Similar to RGBA, specify opacity at end (CSS3) */ - +    color: #F6E;                 /* short hex format */ +    color: #FF66EE;              /* long hex format */ +    color: tomato;               /* a named color */ +    color: rgb(255, 255, 255);   /* as rgb values */ +    color: rgb(10%, 20%, 50%);   /* as rgb percentages */ +    color: rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.3); /* as rgba values (CSS 3) Note: 0 < a < 1 */ +    color: transparent;          /* equivalent to setting the alpha to 0 */ +    color: hsl(0, 100%, 50%);    /* as hsl percentages (CSS 3) */ +    color: hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.3); /* as hsla percentages with alpha */ -    /* Images */ -    background-image: url(/path-to-image/image.jpg); /* quotes inside url() optional */ +    /* Images as backgrounds of elements */ +    background-image: url(/img-path/img.jpg); /* quotes inside url() optional */      /* Fonts */      font-family: Arial; -    font-family: "Courier New"; /* if name has space it appears in single or double quotes */ -    font-family: "Courier New", Trebuchet, Arial, sans-serif; /* if first one was not found -                             browser uses the second font, and so forth */ +    /* if the font family name has a space, it must be quoted */ +    font-family: "Courier New"; +    /* if the first one is not found, the browser uses the next, and so on */ +    font-family: "Courier New", Trebuchet, Arial, sans-serif;  } -  ```  ## Usage -Save any CSS you want in a file with extension `.css`. +Save a CSS stylesheet with the extension `.css`.  ```xml -<!-- you need to include the css file in your page's <head>: --> +<!-- You need to include the css file in your page's <head>. This is the +     recommended method. Refer to http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8284365 -->  <link rel='stylesheet' type='text/css' href='path/to/style.css' /> -<!-- you can also include some CSS inline in your markup. However it is highly   -recommended to avoid this. --> +<!-- You can also include some CSS inline in your markup. -->  <style>     a { color: purple; }  </style> -<!-- or directly set CSS properties on the element.  -This has to be avoided as much as you can. --> +<!-- Or directly set CSS properties on the element. -->  <div style="border: 1px solid red;">  </div> -  ``` -## Precedence +## Precedence or Cascade + +An element may be targeted by multiple selectors and may have a property set on it in more than once. In these cases, one of the rules takes precedence over others. Generally, a rule in a more specific selector take precedence over a less specific one, and a rule occuring later in the stylesheet overwrites a previous one. -As you noticed an element may be targetted by more than one selector.  -and may have a property set on it in more than one.   -In these cases, one of the rules takes precedence over others. +This process is called cascading, hence the name Cascading Style Sheets.  Given the following CSS:  ```css -/*A*/ +/* A */  p.class1[attr='value'] -/*B*/ -p.class1 {} +/* B */ +p.class1 { } -/*C*/ -p.class2 {} +/* C */ +p.class2 { } -/*D*/ -p {} +/* D */ +p { } -/*E*/ +/* E */  p { property: value !important; } -  ```  and the following markup:  ```xml -<p style='/*F*/ property:value;' class='class1 class2' attr='value'> -</p> +<p style='/*F*/ property:value;' class='class1 class2' attr='value' />  ``` -The precedence of style is as followed:   -Remember, the precedence is for each **property**, not for the entire block. +The precedence of style is as follows. Remember, the precedence is for each **property**, not for the entire block. -* `E` has the highest precedence because of the keyword `!important`.   -    It is recommended to avoid this unless it is strictly necessary to use. -* `F` is next, because it is inline style. -* `A` is next, because it is more "specific" than anything else.   -    more specific = more specifiers. here 3 specifiers: 1 tagname `p` +    -    class name `class1` + 1 attribute `attr='value'` -* `C` is next. although it has the same specificness as `B`   -    but it appears last. -* Then is `B` -* and lastly is `D`. +* `E` has the highest precedence because of the keyword `!important`. It is recommended that you avoid its usage. +* `F` is next, because it is an inline style. +* `A` is next, because it is more "specific" than anything else. It has 3 specifiers: The name of the element `p`, its class `class1`, an attribute `attr='value'`. +* `C` is next, even though it has the same specificity as `B`. This is because it appears after `B`. +* `B` is next. +* `D` is the last one.  ## Compatibility -Most of the features in CSS2 (and gradually in CSS3) are compatible across   -all browsers and devices. But it's always vital to have in mind the compatibility  -of what you use in CSS with your target browsers. +Most of the features in CSS 2 (and many in CSS 3) are available across all browsers and devices. But it's always good practice to check before using a new feature. -[QuirksMode CSS](http://www.quirksmode.org/css/) is one of the best sources for this. +## Resources -To run a quick compatibility check, [CanIUse](http://caniuse.com) is a great resource. +* To run a quick compatibility check, [CanIUse](http://caniuse.com). +* CSS Playground [Dabblet](http://dabblet.com/). +* [Mozilla Developer Network's CSS documentation](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS) +* [Codrops' CSS Reference](http://tympanus.net/codrops/css_reference/)  ## Further Reading  * [Understanding Style Precedence in CSS: Specificity, Inheritance, and the Cascade](http://www.vanseodesign.com/css/css-specificity-inheritance-cascaade/) +* [Selecting elements using attributes](https://css-tricks.com/almanac/selectors/a/attribute/)  * [QuirksMode CSS](http://www.quirksmode.org/css/)  * [Z-Index - The stacking context](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/CSS/Understanding_z_index/The_stacking_context) +* [SASS](http://sass-lang.com/) and [LESS](http://lesscss.org/) for CSS pre-processing +* [CSS-Tricks](https://css-tricks.com) | 
