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CSS 1. Introduction: What is CSS? A CSS (cascading style sheet) file allows you to separate your web sites HTML content from its style. As always you use your HTML file to arrange the content, but all of the presentation (fonts, colors, background, borders, text formatting, link effects & so on…) are accomplished within a CSS. What can I do with CSS? CSS is a style language that defines layout of HTML documents. For example, CSS covers fonts, colors, margins, lines, height, width, background images, advanced positions and many other things. Just wait and see! HTML can be used to add layout to websites. But CSS offers more options and is more accurate and sophisticated. CSS is supported by all browsers today. After only a few lessons of this tutorial you will be able to make your own style sheets using CSS to give your website a new great look. What is the difference between CSS and HTML? HTML is used to structure content. CSS is used for formatting structured content. Okay, it sounds a bit technical and confusing. But please continue reading. It will all make sense to you soon. CSS was invented to providing web designers with sophisticated layout opportunities supported by all browsers. At the same time, separation of the presentation style of documents from the content of documents makes site maintenance a lot easier. How does CSS work? You will get to know about the basic CSS model and which codes are necessary to use CSS in an HTML document. Many of the properties used in Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are similar to those of HTML. Thus, if you are used to use HTML for layout, you will most likely recognize many of the codes. Let us look at a concrete example.

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Page 1: CSS by Suresh.N

CSS 1. Introduction:

What is CSS?

A CSS (cascading style sheet) file allows you to separate your web sites HTML content

from its style. As always you use your HTML file to arrange the content, but all of the

presentation (fonts, colors, background, borders, text formatting, link effects & so on…) are

accomplished within a CSS.

What can I do with CSS?

CSS is a style language that defines layout of HTML documents. For example, CSS

covers fonts, colors, margins, lines, height, width, background images, advanced positions and

many other things. Just wait and see!

HTML can be used to add layout to websites. But CSS offers more options and is more

accurate and sophisticated. CSS is supported by all browsers today.

After only a few lessons of this tutorial you will be able to make your own style sheets

using CSS to give your website a new great look.

What is the difference between CSS and HTML?

HTML is used to structure content. CSS is used for formatting structured content. Okay,

it sounds a bit technical and confusing. But please continue reading. It will all make sense to you

soon.

CSS was invented to providing web designers with sophisticated layout opportunities

supported by all browsers. At the same time, separation of the presentation style of documents

from the content of documents makes site maintenance a lot easier.

How does CSS work?

You will get to know about the basic CSS model and which codes are necessary to use

CSS in an HTML document.

Many of the properties used in Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are similar to those of

HTML. Thus, if you are used to use HTML for layout, you will most likely recognize many of

the codes. Let us look at a concrete example.

Page 2: CSS by Suresh.N

The basic CSS syntax:

Let's say we want a nice red color as the background of a webpage:

Using HTML we could have done it like this:

<body bgcolor="#FF0000">

With CSS the same result can be achieved like this:

body {background-color: #FF0000;}

As you will note, the codes are more or less identical for HTML and CSS. The above

example also shows you the fundamental CSS model:

But where do you put the CSS code? This is exactly what we will go over now.

Applying CSS to an HTML document:

There are three ways you can apply CSS to an HTML document. These methods are all

outlined below. We recommend that you focus on the third method i.e. external.

Method 1: In-line (the attribute style):

One way to apply CSS to HTML is by using the HTML attribute style. Building on the

above example with the red background color, it can be applied like this:

<html>

<head>

<title>Example</title>

</head>

<body style="background-color: #FF0000;">

<p>This is a red page</p>

</body>

</html>

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Method 2: Internal (the tag style): Another way is to include the CSS codes using the HTML tag <style>. For example like this:

<html>

<head>

<title>Example</title>

<style type="text/css">

body {background-color: #FF0000;}

</style>

</head>

<body>

<p>This is a red page</p>

</body>

</html>

Method 3: External (link to a style sheet):

The recommended method is to link to a so-called external style sheet. Throughout this

tutorial we will use this method in all our examples.

An external style sheet is simply a text file with the extension .css. Like any other file,

you can place the style sheet on your web server or hard disk.

For example, let's say that your style sheet is named style.css and is located in a folder

named style. The situation can be illustrated like this:

The trick is to create a link from the HTML document (default.htm) to the style sheet

(style.css). Such link can be created with one line of HTML code:

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style/style.css" />

Notice how the path to our style sheet is indicated using the attribute href.

The line of code must be inserted in the header section of the HTML code i.e. between

the <head> and </head> tags. Like this:

<html>

<head>

<title>My document</title>

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style/style.css" />

</head>

<body>

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This link tells the browser that it should use the layout from the CSS file when displaying

the HTML file.

The really smart thing is that several HTML documents can be linked to the same style

sheet. In other words, one CSS file can be used to control the layout of many HTML documents.

This technique can save you a lot of work. If you, for example, would like to change the

background color of a website with 100 pages, a style sheet can save you from having to

manually change all 100 HTML documents. Using CSS, the change can be made in a few

seconds just by changing one code in the central style sheet.

Let's put what we just learned into practice.

Try it yourself:

Open Notepad (or whatever text editor you use) and create two files - an HTML file and

a CSS file - with the following contents:

default.htm

<html>

<head>

<title>My document</title>

<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="style.css" />

</head>

<body>

<h1>My first stylesheet</h1>

</body>

</html>

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style.css body {

background-color: #FF0000;

}

Now place the two files in the same folder. Remember to save the files with the right

extensions (respectively ".htm" and ".css")

Open default.htm with your browser and see how the page has a red background.

Congratulations! You have made your first style sheet!

2. Colors and backgrounds:

In this lesson you will learn how to apply colors and background colors to your websites.

We will also look at advanced methods to position and control background images. The

following CSS properties will be explained:

1. color

2. background-color

3. background-image

4. background-repeat

5. background-attachment

6. background-position

7. background

Foreground color: the 'color' property:

The color property describes the foreground color of an element.

For example, imagine that we want all headlines in a document to be dark red. The

headlines are all marked with the HTML element <h1>. The code below sets the color

of <h1> elements to red.

h1 {

color: #ff0000;

}

Colors can be entered as hexadecimal values as in the example above (#ff0000), or you

can use the names of the colors ("red") or rgb-values (rgb(255,0,0)).

The 'background-color' property:

The background-color property describes the background color of elements.

The element <body> contains all the content of an HTML document. Thus, to change the

background color of an entire page, the background-color property should be applied to

the <body> element.

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You can also apply background colors to other elements including headlines and text. In

the example below, different background colors are applied to<body> and <h1> elements.

body {

background-color: #FFCC66;

}

h1 {

color: #990000;

background-color: #FC9804;

}

Notice that we applied two properties to <h1> by dividing them by a semicolon.

Background images [background-image]: The CSS property background-image is used to insert a background image.

As an example of a background image, we use the butterfly below.

To insert the image of the butterfly as a background image for a web page, simply apply

the background-image property to <body> and specify the location of the image.

body {

background-color: #FFCC66;

background-image: url("butterfly.gif");

}

h1 {

color: #990000;

background-color: #FC9804;

}

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Notice how we specified the location of the image as url("butterfly.gif"). This means

that the image is located in the same folder as the style sheet. You can also refer to images in

other folders using url("../images/butterfly.gif") or even on the Internet indicating the full

address of the file: url("http://www.html.net/butterfly.gif").

Repeat background image [background-repeat]:

In the example above, did you notice that by default the butterfly was repeated both

horizontally and vertically to cover the entire screen? The property background-repeat controls

this behavior.

The table below outlines the four different values for background-repeat.

Value Description

background-repeat: repeat-x The image is repeated horizontally

background-repeat: repeat-y The image is repeated vertically

background-repeat: repeat The image is repeated both horizontally and vertically

background-repeat: no-repeat The image is not repeated

For example, to avoid repetition of a background image the code should look like this:

body {

background-color: #FFCC66;

background-image: url("butterfly.gif");

background-repeat: no-repeat;

}

h1 {

color: #990000;

background-color: #FC9804;

}

Lock background image [background-attachment]:

The property background-attachment specifies whether a background picture is fixed or

scrolls along with the containing element.

A fixed background image will not move with the text when a reader is scrolling the

page, whereas an unlocked background image will scroll along with the text of the web page.

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The table below outlines the two different values for background-attachment

Value Description

Background-attachment: scroll The image scrolls with the page - unlocked

Background-attachment: fixed The image is locked

For example, the code below will fix the background image.

body {

background-color: #FFCC66;

background-image: url("butterfly.gif");

background-repeat: no-repeat;

background-attachment: fixed;

}

h1 {

color: #990000;

background-color: #FC9804;

}

Place background image [background-position]:

By default, a background image will be positioned in the top left corner of the screen.

The property background-position allows you to change this default and position the background

image anywhere you like on the screen.

There are numerous ways to set the values of background-position. However, all of them

are formatted as a set of coordinates. For example, the value '100px 200px' positions the

background image 100px from the left side and 200px from the top of the browser window.

The coordinates can be indicated as percentages of the browser window, fixed units

(pixels, centimetres, etc.) or you can use the words top, bottom, center, left and right. The model

below illustrates the system:

Value Description

background-position: 2cm 2cm The image is positioned 2 cm from the left and 2 cm

down the page

background-position: 50% 25% The image is centrally positioned and one fourth down

the page

background-position: top right The image is positioned in the top-right corner of the

page

Page 9: CSS by Suresh.N

The code example below positions the background image in the bottom right corner:

body {

background-color: #FFCC66;

background-image: url("butterfly.gif");

background-repeat: no-repeat;

background-attachment: fixed;

background-position: right bottom;

}

h1 {

color: #990000;

background-color: #FC9804;

}

Compiling [background]:

The property background is a short hand for all the background properties listed in this lesson.

With background you can compress several properties and thereby write your style sheet

in a shorter way which makes it easier to read.

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For example, look at these five lines:

background-color: #FFCC66;

background-image: url("butterfly.gif");

background-repeat: no-repeat;

background-attachment: fixed;

background-position: right bottom;

Using background the same result can be achieved in just one line of code:

background: #FFCC66 url("butterfly.gif") no-repeat fixed right bottom;

The list of order is as follows:

[background-color] | [background-image] | [background-repeat] | [background-

attachment] | [background-position]

If a property is left out, it will automatically be set to its default value. For example,

if background-attachment and background-position are taken out of the example:

background: #FFCC66 url("butterfly.gif") no-repeat;

These two properties that are not specified would merely be set to their default values

which as you know are scroll and top left.

3. Fonts:

In this lesson you will learn about fonts and how they are applied using CSS. We will

also look at how to work around the issue that specific fonts chosen for a website can only be

seen if the font is installed on the PC used to access the website. The following CSS properties

will be described:

1. font-family

2. font-style

3. font-variant

4. font-weight

5. font-size

6. font

Font family [font-family]:

The property font-family is used to set a prioritized list of fonts to be used to display a

given element or web page. If the first font on the list is not installed on the computer used to

access the site, the next font on the list will be tried until a suitable font is found.

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There are two types of names used to categorize fonts: family-names and generic

families. The two terms are explained below.

Family-name

Examples of a family-name (often known as "font") can e.g. be "Arial", "Times New

Roman" or "Tahoma".

Generic family

Generic families can best be described as groups of family-names with uniformed

appearances. An example is sans-serif, which is a collection of fonts without "feet".

The difference can also be illustrated like this:

When you list fonts for your web site, you naturally start with the most preferred font

followed by some alternative fonts. It is recommended to complete the list with a generic font

family. That way at least the page will be shown using a font of the same family if none of the

specified fonts are available.

An example of a prioritized list of fonts could look like this:

h1 {font-family: arial, verdana, sans-serif;}

h2 {font-family: "Times New Roman", serif;}

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Headlines marked with <h1> will be displayed using the font "Arial". If this font is not

installed on the user's computer, "Verdana" will be used instead. If both these fonts are

unavailable, a font from the sans-serif family will be used to show the headlines.

Notice how the font name "Times New Roman" contains spaces and therefore is listed

using quotation marks.

Font style [font-style]:

The property font-style defines the chosen font either in normal, italic or oblique. In the

example below, all headlines marked with <h2> will be shown in italics.

h1 {font-family: arial, verdana, sans-serif;}

h2 {font-family: "Times New Roman", serif; font-style: italic;}

Font variant [font-variant]:

The property font-variant is used to choose between normal or small-caps variants of a

font. A small-caps font is a font that uses smaller sized capitalized letters (upper case) instead of

lower case letters. Confused? Take a look at these examples:

If font-variant is set to small-caps and no small-caps font is available the browser will

most likely show the text in uppercase instead.

h1 {font-variant: small-caps;}

h2 {font-variant: normal;} Font weight [font-weight]:

The property font-weight describes how bold or "heavy" a font should be presented. A

font can either be normal or bold. Some browsers even support the use of numbers between

100-900 (in hundreds) to describe the weight of a font.

p {font-family: arial, verdana, sans-serif;}

td {font-family: arial, verdana, sans-serif; font-weight: bold;}

Font size [font-size]:

The size of a font is set by the property font-size.

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There are many different units (e.g. pixels and percentages) to choose from to describe

font sizes. In this tutorial we will focus on the most common and appropriate units. Examples

include:

h1 {font-size: 30px;}

h2 {font-size: 12pt;}

h3 {font-size: 120%;}

p {font-size: 1em;}

There is one key difference between the four units above. The units 'px' and 'pt' make the

font size absolute, while '%' and 'em' allow the user to adjust the font size as he/she see fit. Many

users are disabled, elderly or simply suffer from poor vision or a monitor of bad quality. To

make your website accessible for everybody, you should use adjustable units such as '%' or

'em'.

Below you can see an illustration of how to adjust the text size in Mozilla Firefox and

Internet Explorer. Try it yourself - neat feature, don't you think?

Compiling [font]:

Using the font short hand property it is possible to cover all the different font properties

in one single property.

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For example, imagine these four lines of code used to describe font-properties for <p>:

p {

font-style: italic;

font-weight: bold;

font-size: 30px;

font-family: arial, sans-serif;

}

Using the short hand property, the code can be simplified:

p {

font: italic bold 30px arial, sans-serif;

}

The order of values for font is:

font-style | font-variant | font-weight | font-size | font-family

4. Text Formatting:

Formatting and adding style to text is a key issue for any web designer. In this lesson you

will be introduced to the amazing opportunities CSS gives you to add layout to text. The

following properties will be described:

1. text-indent

2. text-align

3. text-decoration

4. letter-spacing

5. text-transform

Text indention [text-indent]:

The property text-indent allows you to add an elegant touch to text paragraphs by applying

an indent to the first line of the paragraph. In the example below a 30px is applied to all text

paragraphs marked with <p>:

p {

text-indent: 30px;

}

Text alignment [text-align]:

The CSS property text-align corresponds to the attribute align used in old versions of HTML.

Text can either be aligned to the left, to the right orcentred. In addition to this, the

value justify will stretch each line so that both the right and left margins are straight. You know

this layout from for example newspapers and magazines.

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In the example below the text in table headings <th> is aligned to the right while the table

data <td> are centred. In addition, normal text paragraphs are justified:

th {

text-align: right;

}

td {

text-align: center;

}

p {

text-align: justify;

}

Text decoration [text-decoration]:

The property text-decoration makes it is possible to add different "decorations" or "effects" to

text. For example, you can underline the text, have a line through or above the text, etc. In the

following example, <h1> are underlined headlines, <h2> are headlines with a line above the text

and <h3> are headlines with a line though the text.

h1 {

text-decoration: underline;

}

h2 {

text-decoration: overline;

}

h3 {

text-decoration: line-through;

} Letter space [letter-spacing]:

The spacing between text characters can be specified using the property letter-spacing. The

value of the property is simply the desired width. For example, if you want a spacing

of 3px between the letters in a text paragraph <p> and 6px between letters in headlines <h1> the

code below could be used.

h1 {

letter-spacing: 6px;

}

p {

letter-spacing: 3px;

}

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Text transformation [text-transform]:

The text-transform property controls the capitalization of a text. You can choose

to capitalize, use uppercase or lowercase regardless of how the original text is looks in the

HTML code.

An example could be the word "headline" which can be presented to the user as

"HEADLINE" or "Headline". There are four possible values for text-transform:

Capitalize:

Capitalizes the first letter of each word. For example: "john doe" will be "John Doe".

Uppercase:

Converts all letters to uppercase. For example: "john doe" will be "JOHN DOE".

Lowercase:

Converts all letters to lowercase. For example: "JOHN DOE" will be "john doe".

None:

No transformations - the text is presented as it appears in the HTML code.

As an example, we will use a list of names. The names are all marked with <li> (list-item).

Let's say that we want names to be capitalized and headlines to be presented in uppercase letters.

Try to take a look at the HTML code for this example and you will see that the text actually

is in lowercase.

h1 {

text-transform: uppercase;

}

li {

text-transform: capitalize;

}

5. Links:

You can apply what you already learned in the previous lessons to links (i.e. change colors,

fonts, underline, etc). The new thing is that CSS allows you to define these properties differently

depending on whether the link is unvisited, visited, active, or whether the cursor is on the link.

This makes it possible to add fancy and useful effects to your website.

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What is a pseudo-class?

A pseudo-class allows you to take into account different conditions or events when defining a

property for an HTML tag.

Let's look at an example. As you know, links are specified in HTML with <a> tags. We can

therefore use “a” as a selector in CSS:

a {

color: blue;

}

A link can have different states. For example, it can be visited or not visited. You can use

pseudo-classes to assign different styles to visited and unvisited links.

a:link {

color: blue;

}

a:visited {

color: red;

}

Use a:link and a:visited for unvisited and visited links respectively. Links that are active have

the pseudo-class a:active and a:hover is when the cursor is on the link.

We will now go through each of the four pseudo-classes with examples and further explanation.

Pseudo-class: link

The pseudo-class :link is used for links leading to pages that the user has not visited.

In the code example below, unvisited links will be light blue.

a:link {

color: #6699CC;

} Pseudo-class: visited

The pseudo-class :visited is used for links leading to pages that the user has visited. For

example, the code below would make all visited links dark purple:

a:visited {

color: #660099;

}

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Pseudo-class: active

The pseudo-class :active is used for links that are active.

This example gives active links a yellow background color:

a:active {

background-color: #FFFF00;

}

Pseudo-class: hover

The pseudo-class :hover is used when the mouse pointer hovers over a link.

This can be used to create interesting effects. For example, if we want our links to be orange

and be italicized when the cursor is pointed at them, our CSS should look like this:

a:hover {

color: orange;

font-style: italic;

}

Example 1: Effect when the cursor is over a link:

It is particular popular to create different effects when the cursor is over a link. We will

therefore look at a few extra examples related to the pseudo-class:hover.

Example 1a: Spacing between letters:

As you will remember from previous lesson, the spacing between letters can be adjusted

using the property letter-spacing. This can be applied to links for a special effect:

a:hover {

letter-spacing: 10px;

font-weight:bold;

color:red;

}

Example 1b: UPPERCASE and lowercase:

In previous lesson we looked at the property text-transform, which can switch between

upper- and lowercase letters. This can also be used to create an effect for links:

a:hover {

text-transform: uppercase;

font-weight:bold;

color:blue;

background-color:yellow;

}

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The two examples gives you an idea about the almost endless possibilities for combining

different properties. You can create your own effects - give it a try!

Example 2: Remove underline of links:

A frequently asked question is how to remove the underlining of links?

You should consider carefully whether it is necessary to remove the underlining as it might

decrease usability of your website significantly. People are used to blue underlined links on web

pages and know that they can click on them. Even my mum knows that! If you change the

underlining and color of links there is a good chance that users will get confused and therefore

not get the full benefit of the content on your website.

That said, it is very simple to remove the underlining of links. As you will recall from lesson

5, the property text-decoration can be used to determine whether text is underlined or not. To

remove underlining, simply set the value of text-decoration to none.

a {

text-decoration:none;

}

Alternatively, you can set text-decoration along with other properties for all four pseudo-

classes.

a:link {

color: blue;

text-decoration:none;

}

a:visited {

color: purple;

text-decoration:none;

}

a:active {

background-color: yellow;

text-decoration:none;

}

a:hover {

color:red;

text-decoration:none;

}

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6. Identification and grouping of elements (class and id):

Sometimes you want to apply a special style to a particular element or a particular group of

elements. In this lesson, we will take a closer look at how you can use class and id to specify

properties for selected elements.

How can you color one particular headline differently than the other headlines on your

website? How can you group your links into different categories and give each category a special

style? These are just examples of questions we will answer in this lesson.

Grouping elements with class:

Let's say that we have two lists of links of different grapes used for white wine and red wine.

The HTML code could look like this:

<p>Grapes for white wine:</p>

<ul>

<li><a href="ri.htm">Riesling</a></li>

<li><a href="ch.htm">Chardonnay</a></li>

<li><a href="pb.htm">Pinot Blanc</a></li>

</ul>

<p>Grapes for red wine:</p>

<ul>

<li><a href="cs.htm">Cabernet Sauvignon</a></li>

<li><a href="me.htm">Merlot</a></li>

<li><a href="pn.htm">Pinot Noir</a></li>

</ul>

Then we want the white wine links to be yellow, the red wine links to be red and the rest of

the existing links on the webpage to stay blue.

To achieve this, we divide the links into two categories. This is done by assigning a class to

each link using the attribute class.

Let us try to specify some classes in the example above:

<p>Grapes for white wine:</p>

<ul>

<li><a href="ri.htm" class="whitewine">Riesling</a></li>

<li><a href="ch.htm" class="whitewine">Chardonnay</a></li>

<li><a href="pb.htm" class="whitewine">Pinot Blanc</a></li>

</ul>

<p>Grapes for red wine:</p>

<ul>

<li><a href="cs.htm" class="redwine">Cabernet

Sauvignon</a></li>

<li><a href="me.htm" class="redwine">Merlot</a></li>

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<li><a href="pn.htm" class="redwine">Pinot Noir</a></li>

</ul>

We can define special properties for links belonging to white wine and red wine,

respectively.

a {

color: blue;

}

a.whitewine {

color: #FFBB00;

}

a.redwine {

color: #800000;

}

As shown in the example you can define the properties for elements which belong to a

certain class by using .classname in the style sheet of the document.

Identification of element using id:

In addition to grouping elements, you might need to identify one unique element. This is

done by using the attribute id.

What is special about the attribute id is that there cannot be two elements in the same

document with the same id. Each id has to be unique. In other cases, you should use

the class attribute instead. Now, let us take a look at an example of a possible usage of id:

<h1>Chapter 1</h1>

...

<h2>Chapter 1.1</h2>

...

<h2>Chapter 1.2</h2>

...

<h1>Chapter 2</h1>

...

<h2>Chapter 2.1</h2>

...

<h3>Chapter 2.1.2</h3>

...

The above could be headings of any document split into chapters or paragraphs. It would be

natural to assign an id to each chapter as follows:

<h1 id="c1">Chapter 1</h1>

...

<h2 id="c1-1">Chapter 1.1</h2>

...

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<h2 id="c1-2">Chapter 1.2</h2>

...

<h1 id="c2">Chapter 2</h1>

...

<h2 id="c2-1">Chapter 2.1</h2>

...

<h3 id="c2-1-2">Chapter 2.1.2</h3>

...

Let us say that the headline for chapter 1.2 must be in red. This can be done accordingly with

CSS:

#c1-2 {

color: red;

}

7. Grouping of elements (span and div):

The elements <span> and <div> are used to group and structure a document and will often be

used together with the attributes class and id.

In this lesson, we will take a closer look at the use of <span> and <div> as exactly these two

HTML elements are of central importance with regards to CSS.

1. Grouping with <span>

2. Grouping with <div>

Grouping with <span>:

The element <span> is what you could call a neutral element which does not add anything to

the document itself. But with CSS, <span> can be used to add visual features to specific parts of

text in your documents.

An example of this could be this Benjamin Franklin quotation:

<p>Early to bed and early to rise

makes a man healthy, wealthy and wise.</p> Let us say we want what Mr. Franklin sees as the benefits of not sleeping your day away

emphasized in red. For that purpose, we can mark the benefits with <span>. Each span is then

added a class, which we can define in our style sheet:

<p>Early to bed and early to rise

makes a man <span class="benefit">healthy</span>,

<span class="benefit">wealthy</span>

and <span class="benefit">wise</span>.</p>

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The CSS belonging to it:

span.benefit {

color:red;

}

Of course you may also use id to add style to the <span>-elements. Just as long as you

remember, that you'll have to apply a unique id to each of the three <span>-elements, as you

learned in the previous lesson.

Grouping with <div>:

Whereas <span> is used within a block-level element as seen in the previous

example, <div> is used to group one or more block-level elements.

Aside from this difference, the grouping with <div> works in more or less the same way. Let us

take a look at an example with two lists of U.S. presidents divided into their political affiliations:

<div id="democrats">

<ul>

<li>Franklin D. Roosevelt</li>

<li>Harry S. Truman</li>

<li>John F. Kennedy</li>

<li>Lyndon B. Johnson</li>

<li>Jimmy Carter</li>

<li>Bill Clinton</li>

</ul>

</div>

<div id="republicans">

<ul>

<li>Dwight D. Eisenhower</li>

<li>Richard Nixon</li>

<li>Gerald Ford</li>

<li>Ronald Reagan</li>

<li>George Bush</li>

<li>George W. Bush</li>

</ul>

</div>

And in our style sheet, we can utilize the grouping in the exact same way as above:

#democrats {

background:blue;

}

#republicans {

background:red;

}

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8. The box model:

The box model in CSS describes the boxes which are being generated for HTML-elements.

The box model also contains detailed options regarding adjusting margin, border, padding and

content for each element. The diagram below shows how the box model is constructed:

The box model in CSS:

The illustration above might seem pretty theoretical to look at, so let's try to use the model in an

actual case with a headline and some text. The HTML for our example is (from the Universal

Declaration of Human Rights):

<h1>Article 1:</h1>

<p>All human beings are born free

and equal in dignity and rights.

They are endowed with reason and conscience

and should act towards one another in a

spirit of brotherhood</p> By adding some color and font-information the example could be presented as follows:

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The example contains two elements: <h1> and <p>. The box model for the two elements can

be illustrated as follows:

Even though it may look a bit complicated, the illustration shows how each HTML-element

is surrounded by boxes. Boxes which we can adjust using CSS.

The properties which regulate the different boxes are: padding, margin and border. The next

two lessons deal with exactly these three properties:

The box model - margin & padding

The box model - border

When you have finished these two lessons, you will master the box model and be able to

layout your documents much finer and more precise than in the old fashion using tables in

HTML.

9. Margin and padding:

In the previous lesson you were introduced to the box model. In this lesson, we will look at

how you can change the presentation of elements by setting the margin and padding properties.

1. Set the margin in an element

2. Set the padding in an element

Set the margin in an element:

An element has four sides: right, left, top and bottom. The margin is the distance from each

side to the neighboring element (or the borders of the document).

As the first example, we will look at how you define margins for the document itself i.e. for

the element <body>. The illustration below shows how we want the margins in our pages to be.

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The CSS code for this would look as follow:

body {

margin-top: 100px;

margin-right: 40px;

margin-bottom: 10px;

margin-left: 70px;

}

Or you could choose a more elegant compilation:

body {

margin: 100px 40px 10px 70px;

}

You can set the margins in the same way on almost every element. For example, we can

choose to define margins for all of our text paragraphs marked with <p>:

body {

margin: 100px 40px 10px 70px;

}

p {

margin: 5px 50px 5px 50px;

}

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Set padding in an element:

Padding can also be understood as "filling". This makes sense as padding does not affect the

distance of the element to other elements but only defines the inner distance between the border

and the content of the element.

The usage of padding can be illustrated by looking at a simple example where all headlines

have background colors:

h1 {

background: yellow;

}

h2 {

background: orange;

}

By defining padding for the headlines, you change how much filling there will be around the text

in each headline:

h1 {

background: yellow;

padding: 20px 20px 20px 80px;

}

h2 {

background: orange;

padding-left:120px;

}

10. Borders:

Borders can be used for many things, for example as a decorative element or to underline a

separation of two things. CSS gives you endless options when using borders in your pages.

1. border-width

2. border-color

3. border-style

4. border

The width of borders [border-width]:

The width of borders is defined by the property border-width, which can obtain the values

thin, medium, and thick, or a numeric value, indicated in pixels. The figure below illustrates the

system:

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The color of borders [border-color]:

The property border-color defines which color the border has. The values are the normal

color-values for example "#123456", "rgb(123,123,123)" or "yellow" .

Types of borders [border-style]:

There are different types of borders to choose from. Below are shown 8 different types of

borders as Internet Explorer 5.5 interprets them. All examples are shown with the color "gold"

and the thickness "thick" but can naturally be shown in other colors and thicknesses.

The values none or hidden can be used if you do not want any border.

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Examples of defining borders:

The three properties described above can be put together by each element and thereby

produce different borders. To illustrate this, we will take a look at a document where we define

different borders for <h1>, <h2>, <ul> and <p>. The result may not be that pretty but it

illustrates some of the many possibilities:

h1 {

border-width: thick;

border-style: dotted;

border-color: gold;

}

h2 {

border-width: 20px;

border-style: outset;

border-color: red;

}

p {

border-width: 1px;

border-style: dashed;

border-color: blue;

}

ul {

border-width: thin;

border-style: solid;

border-color: orange;

}

It is also possible to state special properties for top-, bottom-, right- or left borders. The

following example shows you how:

h1 {

border-top-width: thick;

border-top-style: solid;

border-top-color: red;

border-bottom-width: thick;

border-bottom-style: solid;

border-bottom-color: blue;

border-right-width: thick;

border-right-style: solid;

border-right-color: green;

border-left-width: thick;

border-left-style: solid;

border-left-color: orange;

}

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Compilation [border]

As it is also the case for many other properties, you can compile many properties into one

using border. Let us take a look at an example:

p {

border-width: 1px;

border-style: solid;

border-color: blue;

}

Can be compiled into: p {

border: 1px solid blue;

}

11. Height and width:

Up until now, we have not cared much about the dimensions of the elements we have worked

with. In this lesson, we will take a look at how you easily can define the height and width of an

element.

1. width

2. height

Setting the width [width]:

With the width-property, you can define a certain width of an element.

The simple example below provides us with a box wherein text can be typed:

div.box {

width: 200px;

border: 1px solid black;

background: orange;

} Setting the height [height]:

In the example above notice how the height of the box is set by the content of the box. You

can affect the height of an element with the property height. As an example let us try to make the

box in the example 500px high:

div.box {

height: 500px;

width: 200px;

border: 1px solid black;

background: orange;

}

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12. Floating elements (floats):

An element can be floated to the right or to left by using the property float. That is to say that

the box with its contents either floats to the right or to the left in a document. The following

figure illustrates the principle:

If we for example would like to have a text wrapping around a picture, the result would be

like this:

How is it done?

The HTML code for the example above, look as follows:

<div id="picture">

<img src="bill.jpg" alt="Bill Gates">

</div>

<p>causas naturales et antecedentes,

idciro etiam nostrarum voluntatum...</p>

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To get the picture floating to the left and the text to surround it, you only have to define the

width of the box which surrounds the picture and thereafter set the property float to left:

#picture {

float:left;

width: 100px;

} Another example: columns:

Floats can also be used for columns in a document. To create the columns, you simply have

to structure the desired columns in the HTML-code with<div> as follows:

<div id="column1">

<p>Haec disserens qua de re agatur

et in quo causa consistat non videt...</p>

</div>

<div id="column2">

<p>causas naturales et antecedentes,

idciro etiam nostrarum voluntatum...</p>

</div>

<div id="column3">

<p>nam nihil esset in nostra

potestate si res ita se haberet...</p>

</div>

Now the desired width of the columns is set to e.g. 33%, and then you simply float each column

to the left by defining the property float:

#column1 {

float:left;

width: 33%;

}

#column2 {

float:left;

width: 33%;

}

#column3 {

float:left;

width: 33%;

} float can be set as either left, right or none.

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The property clear:

The clear property is used to control how the subsequent elements of floated elements in a

document shall behave.

By default, the subsequent elements are moved up to fill the available space which will be

freed when a box is floated to a side. Look at the example above wherein the text is

automatically moved up beside the picture of Bill Gates.

The property clear can assume the values left, right, both or none. The principle is, if clear,

for example, is set to both for a box, the top margin border of this box will always be under the

lower margin border for possible floating boxes coming from above.

<div id="picture">

<img src="bill.jpg" alt="Bill Gates">

</div>

<h1>Bill Gates</h1>

<p class="floatstop">causas naturales et antecedentes,

idciro etiam nostrarum voluntatum...</p>

To avoid the text from floating up next to the picture, we can add the following to our CSS:

#picture {

float:left;

width: 100px;

}

.floatstop {

clear:both;

}

13. Positioning of elements:

With CSS positioning, you can place an element exactly where you want it on your page.

Together with floats, positioning gives you many possibilities to create an advanced and precise

layout.

The following will be discussed in this lesson:

1. The principle behind CSS positioning

2. Absolute positioning

3. Relative positioning

The principle behind CSS positioning:

Imagine a browser window as a system of coordinates:

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The principle behind CSS positioning is that you can position any box anywhere in the

system of coordinates.

Let's say we want to position a headline. By using the box model the headline will appear as

follows:

If we want this headline positioned 100px from the top of the document and 200px from the left

of the document, we could type the following in our CSS:

h1 {

position:absolute;

top: 100px;

left: 200px;

}

The result will be as follows:

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As you can see, positioning with CSS is a very precise technique to place elements. It is

much easier than trying to use tables, transparent images or anything else.

Absolute positioning:

An element which is positioned absolute does not obtain any space in the document. This

means that it does not leave an empty space after being positioned.

To position an element absolutely, the position property is set as absolute. You can

subsequently use the properties left, right, top, and bottom to place the box.

As an example of absolute positioning, we choose to place 4 boxes in each corner of the

document:

#box1 {

position:absolute;

top: 50px;

left: 50px;

}

#box2 {

position:absolute;

top: 50px;

right: 50px;

}

#box3 {

position:absolute;

bottom: 50px;

right: 50px;

}

#box4 {

position:absolute;

bottom: 50px;

left: 50px;

}

Relative positioning:

To position an element relatively, the property position is set as relative. The difference

between absolute and relative positioning is how the position is being calculated.

The position for an element which is relatively positioned is calculated from the original

position in the document. That means that you move the element to the right, to the left, up or

down. This way, the element still obtains a space in the document after it is positioned.

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As an example of relative positioning, we can try to position three pictures relatively to their

original position on the page. Notice how the pictures leave empty spaces at their original

positions in the document:

#dog1 {

position:relative;

left: 350px;

bottom: 150px;

}

#dog2 {

position:relative;

left: 150px;

bottom: 500px;

}

#dog3 {

position:relative;

left: 50px;

bottom: 700px;

}

14. Layer on layer with z-index (Layers):

CSS operates in three dimensions - height, width and depth. We have seen the first two

dimensions in previous lessons. In this lesson, we will learn how to let different elements

become layers. In short, this means the order of which the elements overlap one another.

For that purpose, you can assign each element a number (z-index). The system is that an

element with a higher number overlaps an element with a lower number.

Let us say we are playing poker and have a royal flush. Our hand can be presented in a way

where each card has got a z-index:

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In this case, the numbers follow on another (1-5) but the same result can be obtained by using

5 different numbers. The important thing is the chronological sequence of the numbers (the

order).

The code in the card example could look like this:

#ten_of_diamonds {

position: absolute;

left: 100px;

top: 100px;

z-index: 1;

}

#jack_of_diamonds {

position: absolute;

left: 115px;

top: 115px;

z-index: 2;

}

#queen_of_diamonds {

position: absolute;

left: 130px;

top: 130px;

z-index: 3;

}

#king_of_diamonds {

position: absolute;

left: 145px;

top: 145px;

z-index: 4;

}

#ace_of_diamonds {

position: absolute;

left: 160px;

top: 160px;

z-index: 5;

}

The method is relatively simple but the possibilities are several. You can place images on text or

text above text etc.