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Learn CSS
  1. Introduction
  2. Syntax
  3. CSS2 Reference

Syntax

The CSS syntax is made up of three parts: a selector, a property and a value:

selector {property: value}

The selector is normally the HTML element/tag you wish to define, the property is the attribute you wish to change, and each property can take a value. The property and value are separated by a colon and surrounded by curly braces:

body {color: black}

If  the value is multiple words, put quotes around the value:

p {font-family: "sans serif"}

Note: If you wish to specify more than one property, you must separate each property with a semi-colon. The example below shows how to define a center aligned paragraph, with a red text color:

p {text-align:center;color:red}

To make the style definitions more readable, you can describe one property on each line, like this:

p
{
text-align: center;
color: black;
font-family: arial
}

Grouping

You can group selectors. Separate each selector with a comma. In the example below we have grouped all the header elements. All header elements will be green:

h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6
{
color: green
}

The class Selector

With the class selector you can define different styles for the same type of HTML element. Say that you would like to have two types of paragraphs in your document: one right-aligned paragraph, and one center-aligned paragraph. Here is how you can do it with styles:

p.right {text-align: right}
p.center {text-align: center}

You have to use the class attribute in your HTML document:

<p class="right">
This paragraph will be right-aligned.
</p><p class="center">
This paragraph will be center-aligned.
</p>

Note: Only one class attribute can be specified per HTML element! The example below is wrong:

<p class="right" class="center">
This is a paragraph.
</p>

You can also omit the tag name in the selector to define a style that will be used by all HTML elements that have a certain class. In the example below, all HTML elements with class="center" will be center-aligned:

.center {text-align: center}

In the code below both the h1 element and the p element have class="center". This means that both elements will follow the rules in the ".center" selector:  

<h1 class="center">
This heading will be center-aligned
</h1><p class="center">
This paragraph will also be center-aligned.
</p>


*Do NOT start a class name with a number! It will not work in Mozilla/Firefox.

The id Selector

With the id selector you can define the same style for different HTML elements.

The style rule below will match any element that has an id attribute with a value of "green":

#green {color: green}

The rule above will match both the h1 and the p element:

<h1 id="green">Some text</h1>
<p id="green">Some text</p>

The style rule below will match a p element that has an id with a value of "para1":

p#para1
{
text-align: center;
color: red
}

The style rule below will match any p element that has an id attribute with a value of "green":

p#green {color: green}

The rule above will not match an h1 element:

<h1 id="green">Some text</h1>


*Do NOT start an ID name with a number! It will not work in Mozilla/Firefox.

CSS Comments

You can insert comments into CSS to explain your code, which can help you when you edit the source code at a later date. A comment will be ignored by the browser. A CSS comment begins with "/*", and ends with "*/", like this:

/* This is a comment */
p
{
text-align: center;
/* This is another comment */
color: black;
font-family: arial
}
 
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