CSS overview

styling a website using a design language

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2 min read

Cascading style sheets (CSS) allow us to "style" a website and its components, in terms of:

  • Backgrounds

  • Spacing (margins, borders, paddings)

  • Displaying

  • Positioning

  • Layering ("bring-to-front")

  • Visibility (hiding/showing)

  • Transforming (rotating/flipping)

  • Animating

  • Typography

Examples

CSS looks like this:

h1 {
    font-size: 48px;
    color: red;
}

h2 {
    font-size: 24px;
    color: blue;
    margin-bottom: 30px;
}

.overlapping {
    position: absolute;
    top: 0;
    z-index: 10000;
}

Selectors

A selector refers to an element in an HTML document (e.g. h1) and has a set of { curly braces }:

h1 {}

Declarations

A declaration consists of

[a property]: [a value]

We would place a declaration inside of a selector's curly braces like such:

h1 {
    font-size: 48px; 
    color: red; 
}

A group of selectors with declarations can form a stylesheet (the "SS" in CSS!)

Whereas:

  • HTML provides a rough order and arrangement of elements of a webpage...

  • ...CSS supplies design details with pixel-precision values!

Cascades

The "C" in CSS refers to "cascading" and, in this context, that simply means that any styling instruction/rule that happens further down the stylesheet, becomes the new rule!

For example, in an HTML document like this:

<html>
    <body>
        <h1 class="red">Title</h1>
    </body>
</html>

The text will appear red if the CSS works like this:

h1 {
    color: green; 
}

.red {
    /* any element with class="red" */
    color: red;
}

The second instruction overrides the first because it comes later in the stylesheet!