Now let's change the color of some of our text.
We can do this by changing the style
of your h2
element.
The property that is responsible for the color of an element's text is the color
style property.
Here's how you would set your h2
element's text color to blue:
<h2 style="color: blue;">CatPhotoApp</h2>
Note that it is a good practice to end inline style
declarations with a ;
.
With CSS, there are hundreds of CSS properties that you can use to change the way an element looks on your page.
When you entered <h2 style="color: red;">CatPhotoApp</h2>
, you were styling that individual h2
element with inline CSS, which stands for Cascading Style Sheets.
That's one way to specify the style of an element, but there's a better way to apply CSS.
At the top of your code, create a style
block like this:
<style>
</style>
Inside that style block, you can create a CSS selector for all h2
elements. For example, if you wanted all h2
elements to be red, you would add a style rule that looks like this:
<style>
h2 {
color: red;
}
</style>
Note that it's important to have both opening and closing curly braces ({
and }
) around each element's style rule(s). You also need to make sure that your element's style definition is between the opening and closing style tags. Finally, be sure to add a semicolon to the end of each of your element's style rules.
Classes are reusable styles that can be added to HTML elements.
Here's an example CSS class declaration:
<style>
.blue-text {
color: blue;
}
</style>
You can see that we've created a CSS class called blue-text
within the <style>
tag. You can apply a class to an HTML element like this: <h2 class="blue-text">CatPhotoApp</h2>
. Note that in your CSS style
element, class names start with a period. In your HTML elements' class attribute, the class name does not include the period.
Classes allow you to use the same CSS styles on multiple HTML elements. You can see this by applying your red-text
class to the first p
element.
Font size is controlled by the font-size
CSS property, like this:
h1 {
font-size: 30px;
}
You can set which font an element should use, by using the font-family
property.
For example, if you wanted to set your h2
element's font to sans-serif
, you would use the following CSS:
h2 {
font-family: sans-serif;
}
In addition to specifying common fonts that are found on most operating systems, we can also specify non-standard, custom web fonts for use on our website. There are many sources for web fonts on the Internet. For this example we will focus on the Google Fonts library.
Google Fonts is a free library of web fonts that you can use in your CSS by referencing the font's URL.
So, let's go ahead and import and apply a Google font (note that if Google is blocked in your country, you will need to skip this challenge).
To import a Google Font, you can copy the font's URL from the Google Fonts library and then paste it in your HTML. For this challenge, we'll import the Lobster
font. To do this, copy the following code snippet and paste it into the top of your code editor (before the opening style
element):
<link href="https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Lobster" rel="stylesheet" type="text/css">
Now you can use the Lobster
font in your CSS by using Lobster
as the FAMILY_NAME as in the following example:
font-family: FAMILY_NAME, GENERIC_NAME;
The GENERIC_NAME is optional, and is a fallback font in case the other specified font is not available. This is covered in the next challenge.
Family names are case-sensitive and need to be wrapped in quotes if there is a space in the name. For example, you need quotes to use the "Open Sans"
font, but not to use the Lobster
font.
There are several default fonts that are available in all browsers. These generic font families include monospace
, serif
and sans-serif
.
When one font isn't available, you can tell the browser to "degrade" to another font.
For example, if you wanted an element to use the Helvetica
font, but degrade to the sans-serif
font when Helvetica
isn't available, you will specify it as follows:
p {
font-family: Helvetica, sans-serif;
}
Generic font family names are not case-sensitive. Also, they do not need quotes because they are CSS keywords.
CSS has a property called width
that controls an element's width. Just like with fonts, we'll use px
(pixels) to specify the image's width.
For example, if we wanted to create a CSS class called larger-image
that gave HTML elements a width of 500 pixels, we'd use:
<style>
.larger-image {
width: 500px;
}
</style>
CSS borders have properties like style
, color
and width
.
For example, if we wanted to create a red, 5 pixel border around an HTML element, we could use this class:
<style>
.thin-red-border {
border-color: red;
border-width: 5px;
border-style: solid;
}
</style>
Your cat photo currently has sharp corners. We can round out those corners with a CSS property called border-radius
.
You can specify a border-radius
with pixels. Give your cat photo a border-radius
of 10px
.
In addition to pixels, you can also specify the border-radius
using a percentage.
Give your cat photo a border-radius
of 50%
.
You can set an element's background color with the background-color
property.
For example, if you wanted an element's background color to be green
, you'd put this within your style
element:
.green-background {
background-color: green;
}
In addition to classes, each HTML element can also have an id
attribute.
There are several benefits to using id
attributes: You can use an id
to style a single element and later you'll learn that you can use them to select and modify specific elements with JavaScript.
id
attributes should be unique. Browsers won't enforce this, but it is a widely agreed upon best practice. So please don't give more than one element the same id
attribute.
Here's an example of how you give your h2
element the id of cat-photo-app
:
<h2 id="cat-photo-app">
One cool thing about id
attributes is that, like classes, you can style them using CSS.
However, an id
is not reusable and should only be applied to one element. An id
also has a higher specificity (importance) than a class so if both are applied to the same element and have conflicting styles, the styles of the id
will be applied.
Here's an example of how you can take your element with the id
attribute of cat-photo-element
and give it the background color of green. In your style
element:
#cat-photo-element {
background-color: green;
}
Note that inside your style
element, you always reference classes by putting a .
in front of their names. You always reference ids by putting a #
in front of their names.
Now let's put our Cat Photo App away for a little while and learn more about styling HTML.
You may have already noticed this, but all HTML elements are essentially little rectangles.
Three important properties control the space that surrounds each HTML element: padding
, border
, and margin
.
An element's padding
controls the amount of space between the element's content and its border
.
Here, we can see that the blue box and the red box are nested within the yellow box. Note that the red box has more padding
than the blue box.
When you increase the blue box's padding
, it will increase the distance (padding
) between the text and the border around it.
An element's margin
controls the amount of space between an element's border
and surrounding elements.
Here, we can see that the blue box and the red box are nested within the yellow box. Note that the red box has a bigger margin
than the blue box, making it appear smaller.
When you increase the blue box's margin
, it will increase the distance between its border and surrounding elements.
An element's margin
controls the amount of space between an element's border
and surrounding elements.
If you set an element's margin
to a negative value, the element will grow larger.
Sometimes you will want to customize an element so that it has different amounts of padding
on each of its sides.
CSS allows you to control the padding
of all four individual sides of an element with the padding-top
, padding-right
, padding-bottom
, and padding-left
properties.
Sometimes you will want to customize an element so that it has a different margin
on each of its sides.
CSS allows you to control the margin
of all four individual sides of an element with the margin-top
, margin-right
, margin-bottom
, and margin-left
properties.
Instead of specifying an element's padding-top
, padding-right
, padding-bottom
, and padding-left
properties individually, you can specify them all in one line, like this:
padding: 10px 20px 10px 20px;
These four values work like a clock: top, right, bottom, left, and will produce the exact same result as using the side-specific padding instructions.
Let's try this again, but with margin
this time.
Instead of specifying an element's margin-top
, margin-right
, margin-bottom
, and margin-left
properties individually, you can specify them all in one line, like this:
margin: 10px 20px 10px 20px;
These four values work like a clock: top, right, bottom, left, and will produce the exact same result as using the side-specific margin instructions.
You have been adding id
or class
attributes to elements that you wish to specifically style. These are known as ID and class selectors. There are other CSS Selectors you can use to select custom groups of elements to style.
Let's bring out CatPhotoApp again to practice using CSS Selectors.
For this challenge, you will use the [attr=value]
attribute selector to style the checkboxes in CatPhotoApp. This selector matches and styles elements with a specific attribute value. For example, the below code changes the margins of all elements with the attribute type
and a corresponding value of radio
:
[type='radio'] {
margin: 20px 0px 20px 0px;
}
The last several challenges all set an element's margin or padding with pixels (px
). Pixels are a type of length unit, which is what tells the browser how to size or space an item. In addition to px
, CSS has a number of different length unit options that you can use.
The two main types of length units are absolute and relative. Absolute units tie to physical units of length. For example, in
and mm
refer to inches and millimeters, respectively.
Absolute length units approximate the actual measurement on a screen, but there are some differences depending on a screen's resolution.
Relative units, such as em
or rem
, are relative to another length value. For example, em
is based on the size of an element's font. If you use it to set the font-size
property itself, it's relative to the parent's font-size
.
Note: There are several relative unit options that are tied to the size of the viewport. They are covered in the Responsive Web Design Principles section.
Now let's start fresh and talk about CSS inheritance.
Every HTML page has a body
element.
We can prove that the body
element exists here by giving it a background-color
of black.
We can do this by adding the following to our style
element:
body {
background-color: black;
}
Now we've proven that every HTML page has a body
element, and that its body
element can also be styled with CSS.
Remember, you can style your body
element just like any other HTML element, and all your other elements will inherit your body
element's styles.
First, create a h1
element with the text Hello World
Then, let's give all elements on your page the color of green
by adding color: green;
to your body
element's style declaration.
Finally, give your body
element the font-family of monospace
by adding font-family: monospace;
to your body
element's style declaration.
Sometimes your HTML elements will receive multiple styles that conflict with one another.
For example, your h1
element can't be both green and pink at the same time.
Let's see what happens when we create a class that makes text pink, then apply it to an element. Will our class override the body
element's color: green;
CSS property?
Create a CSS class called pink-text
that gives an element the color pink.
Give your h1
element the class of pink-text
.
Our pink-text
class overrode our body
element's CSS declaration!
We just proved that our classes will override the body
element's CSS. So the next logical question is, what can we do to override our pink-text
class?
Create an additional CSS class called blue-text
that gives an element the color blue. Make sure it's below your pink-text
class declaration.
Apply the blue-text
class to your h1
element in addition to your pink-text
class, and let's see which one wins.
Applying multiple class attributes to a HTML element is done with a space between them like this:
class="class1 class2"
Note: It doesn't matter which order the classes are listed in the HTML element.
However, the order of the class
declarations in the <style>
section is what is important. The second declaration will always take precedence over the first. Because .blue-text
is declared second, it overrides the attributes of .pink-text
We just proved that browsers read CSS from top to bottom in order of their declaration. That means that, in the event of a conflict, the browser will use whichever CSS declaration came last. Notice that if we even had put blue-text
before pink-text
in our h1
element's classes, it would still look at the declaration order and not the order of their use!
But we're not done yet. There are other ways that you can override CSS. Do you remember id attributes?
Let's override your pink-text
and blue-text
classes, and make your h1
element orange, by giving the h1
element an id and then styling that id.
Give your h1
element the id
attribute of orange-text
. Remember, id styles look like this:
<h1 id="orange-text">
Leave the blue-text
and pink-text
classes on your h1
element.
Create a CSS declaration for your orange-text
id in your style
element. Here's an example of what this looks like:
#brown-text {
color: brown;
}
Note: It doesn't matter whether you declare this CSS above or below pink-text
class, since the id
attribute will always take precedence.
So we've proven that id declarations override class declarations, regardless of where they are declared in your style
element CSS.
There are other ways that you can override CSS. Do you remember inline styles?
Use an inline style to try to make our h1
element white. Remember, inline styles look like this:
<h1 style="color: green;">
Leave the blue-text
and pink-text
classes on your h1
element.
Yay! We just proved that inline styles will override all the CSS declarations in your style
element.
But wait. There's one last way to override CSS. This is the most powerful method of all. But before we do it, let's talk about why you would ever want to override CSS.
In many situations, you will use CSS libraries. These may accidentally override your own CSS. So when you absolutely need to be sure that an element has specific CSS, you can use !important
.
Let's go all the way back to our pink-text
class declaration. Remember that our pink-text
class was overridden by subsequent class declarations, id declarations, and inline styles.
Let's add the keyword !important
to your pink-text element's color declaration to make 100% sure that your h1
element will be pink.
An example of how to do this is:
color: red !important;
Did you know there are other ways to represent colors in CSS? One of these ways is called hexadecimal code, or hex code for short.
We usually use decimals, or base 10 numbers, which use the symbols 0 to 9 for each digit. Hexadecimals (or hex) are base 16 numbers. This means it uses sixteen distinct symbols. Like decimals, the symbols 0-9 represent the values zero to nine. Then A,B,C,D,E,F represent the values ten to fifteen. Altogether, 0 to F can represent a digit in hexadecimal, giving us 16 total possible values. You can find more information about hexadecimal numbers here.
In CSS, we can use 6 hexadecimal digits to represent colors, two each for the red (R), green (G), and blue (B) components. For example, #000000
is black and is also the lowest possible value. You can find more information about the RGB color system here.
body {
color: #000000;
}
Replace the word black
in our body
element's background-color with its hex code representation, #000000
.
To review, hex codes use 6 hexadecimal digits to represent colors, two each for red (R), green (G), and blue (B) components.
From these three pure colors (red, green, and blue), we can vary the amounts of each to create over 16 million other colors!
For example, orange is pure red, mixed with some green, and no blue. In hex code, this translates to being #FFA500
.
The digit 0
is the lowest number in hex code, and represents a complete absence of color.
The digit F
is the highest number in hex code, and represents the maximum possible brightness.
Replace the color words in our style
element with their correct hex codes.
Color | Hex Code |
---|---|
Dodger Blue | #1E90FF |
Green | #00FF00 |
Orange | #FFA500 |
Red | #FF0000 |
Many people feel overwhelmed by the possibilities of more than 16 million colors. And it's difficult to remember hex code. Fortunately, you can shorten it.
For example, red's hex code #FF0000
can be shortened to #F00
. This shortened form gives one digit for red, one digit for green, and one digit for blue.
This reduces the total number of possible colors to around 4,000. But browsers will interpret #FF0000
and #F00
as exactly the same color.
Go ahead, try using the abbreviated hex codes to color the correct elements.
Color | Short Hex Code |
---|---|
Cyan | #0FF |
Green | #0F0 |
Red | #F00 |
Fuchsia | #F0F |
Another way you can represent colors in CSS is by using RGB
values.
The RGB
value for black looks like this:
rgb(0, 0, 0)
The RGB
value for white looks like this:
rgb(255, 255, 255)
Instead of using six hexadecimal digits like you do with hex code, with RGB
you specify the brightness of each color with a number between 0 and 255.
If you do the math, the two digits for one color equal 16 times 16, which gives us 256 total values. So RGB
, which starts counting from zero, has the exact same number of possible values as hex code.
Here's an example of how you'd change the body
background to orange using its RGB code.
body {
background-color: rgb(255, 165, 0);
}
Let's replace the hex code in our body
element's background color with the RGB value for black: rgb(0, 0, 0)
Just like with hex code, you can mix colors in RGB by using combinations of different values.
Replace the hex codes in our style
element with their correct RGB values.
Color | RGB |
---|---|
Blue | rgb(0, 0, 255) |
Red | rgb(255, 0, 0) |
Orchid | rgb(218, 112, 214) |
Sienna | rgb(160, 82, 45) |
CSS Variables are a powerful way to change many CSS style properties at once by changing only one value.
Follow the instructions below to see how changing just three values can change the styling of many elements.
In the penguin
class, change the black
value to gray
, the gray
value to white
, and the yellow
value to orange
.
To create a CSS variable, you just need to give it a name with two hyphens in front of it and assign it a value like this:
--penguin-skin: gray;
This will create a variable named --penguin-skin
and assign it the value of gray
. Now you can use that variable elsewhere in your CSS to change the value of other elements to gray.
In the penguin
class, create a variable name --penguin-skin
and give it a value of gray
.
After you create your variable, you can assign its value to other CSS properties by referencing the name you gave it.
background: var(--penguin-skin);
This will change the background of whatever element you are targeting to gray because that is the value of the --penguin-skin
variable. Note that styles will not be applied unless the variable names are an exact match.
Apply the --penguin-skin
variable to the background
property of the penguin-top
, penguin-bottom
, right-hand
and left-hand
classes.
When using your variable as a CSS property value, you can attach a fallback value that your browser will revert to if the given variable is invalid.
Note: This fallback is not used to increase browser compatibility, and it will not work on IE browsers. Rather, it is used so that the browser has a color to display if it cannot find your variable.
Here's how you do it:
background: var(--penguin-skin, black);
This will set background to black
if your variable wasn't set. Note that this can be useful for debugging.
When working with CSS you will likely run into browser compatibility issues at some point. This is why it's important to provide browser fallbacks to avoid potential problems.
When your browser parses the CSS of a webpage, it ignores any properties that it doesn't recognize or support. For example, if you use a CSS variable to assign a background color on a site, Internet Explorer will ignore the background color because it does not support CSS variables. In that case, the browser will use whatever value it has for that property. If it can't find any other value set for that property, it will revert to the default value, which is typically not ideal.
This means that if you do want to provide a browser fallback, it's as easy as providing another more widely supported value immediately before your declaration. That way an older browser will have something to fall back on, while a newer browser will just interpret whatever declaration comes later in the cascade.
It looks like a variable is being used to set the background color of the .red-box
class. Let's improve our browser compatibility by adding another background
declaration right before the existing declaration and set its value to red
.
When you create a variable, it is available for you to use inside the selector in which you create it. It also is available in any of that selector's descendants. This happens because CSS variables are inherited, just like ordinary properties.
To make use of inheritance, CSS variables are often defined in the :root element.
:root
is a pseudo-class selector that matches the root element of the document, usually the html
element. By creating your variables in :root
, they will be available globally and can be accessed from any other selector in the style sheet.
Define a variable named --penguin-belly
in the :root
selector and give it the value of pink
. You can then see that the variable is inherited and that all the child elements which use it get pink backgrounds.
When you create your variables in :root
they will set the value of that variable for the whole page.
You can then over-write these variables by setting them again within a specific element.
Change the value of --penguin-belly
to white
in the penguin
class.
CSS Variables can simplify the way you use media queries.
For instance, when your screen is smaller or larger than your media query break point, you can change the value of a variable, and it will apply its style wherever it is used.
In the :root
selector of the media query
, change it so --penguin-size
is redefined and given a value of 200px
. Also, redefine --penguin-skin
and give it a value of black
. Then resize the preview to see this change in action.
<style> :root { --penguin-size: 300px; --penguin-skin: gray; --penguin-belly: white; --penguin-beak: orange; } @media (max- 350px) { :root { /* Only change code below this line */ --penguin-size: 200px; --penguin-skin: black; /* Only change code above this line */ } } .penguin { position: relative; margin: auto; display: block; margin-top: 5%; var(--penguin-size, 300px); height: var(--penguin-size, 300px); } .right-cheek { top: 15%; left: 35%; background: var(--penguin-belly, white); 60%; height: 70%; border-radius: 70% 70% 60% 60%; } .left-cheek { top: 15%; left: 5%; background: var(--penguin-belly, white); 60%; height: 70%; border-radius: 70% 70% 60% 60%; } .belly { top: 60%; left: 2.5%; background: var(--penguin-belly, white); 95%; height: 100%; border-radius: 120% 120% 100% 100%; } .penguin-top { top: 10%; left: 25%; background: var(--penguin-skin, gray); 50%; height: 45%; border-radius: 70% 70% 60% 60%; } .penguin-bottom { top: 40%; left: 23.5%; background: var(--penguin-skin, gray); 53%; height: 45%; border-radius: 70% 70% 100% 100%; } .right-hand { top: 5%; left: 25%; background: var(--penguin-skin, black); 30%; height: 60%; border-radius: 30% 30% 120% 30%; transform: rotate(130deg); z-index: -1; animation-duration: 3s; animation-name: wave; animation-iteration-count: infinite; transform-origin:0% 0%; animation-timing-function: linear; } @keyframes wave { 10% { transform: rotate(110deg); } 20% { transform: rotate(130deg); } 30% { transform: rotate(110deg); } 40% { transform: rotate(130deg); } } .left-hand { top: 0%; left: 75%; background: var(--penguin-skin, gray); 30%; height: 60%; border-radius: 30% 30% 30% 120%; transform: rotate(-45deg); z-index: -1; } .right-feet { top: 85%; left: 60%; background: var(--penguin-beak, orange); 15%; height: 30%; border-radius: 50% 50% 50% 50%; transform: rotate(-80deg); z-index: -2222; } .left-feet { top: 85%; left: 25%; background: var(--penguin-beak, orange); 15%; height: 30%; border-radius: 50% 50% 50% 50%; transform: rotate(80deg); z-index: -2222; } .right-eye { top: 45%; left: 60%; background: black; 15%; height: 17%; border-radius: 50%; } .left-eye { top: 45%; left: 25%; background: black; 15%; height: 17%; border-radius: 50%; } .sparkle { top: 25%; left:-23%; background: white; 150%; height: 100%; border-radius: 50%; } .blush-right { top: 65%; left: 15%; background: pink; 15%; height: 10%; border-radius: 50%; } .blush-left { top: 65%; left: 70%; background: pink; 15%; height: 10%; border-radius: 50%; } .beak-top { top: 60%; left: 40%; background: var(--penguin-beak, orange); 20%; height: 10%; border-radius: 50%; } .beak-bottom { top: 65%; left: 42%; background: var(--penguin-beak, orange); 16%; height: 10%; border-radius: 50%; } body { background:#c6faf1; } .penguin * { position: absolute; } </style> <div class="penguin"> <div class="penguin-bottom"> <div class="right-hand"></div> <div class="left-hand"></div> <div class="right-feet"></div> <div class="left-feet"></div> </div> <div class="penguin-top"> <div class="right-cheek"></div> <div class="left-cheek"></div> <div class="belly"></div> <div class="right-eye"> <div class="sparkle"></div> </div> <div class="left-eye"> <div class="sparkle"></div> </div> <div class="blush-right"></div> <div class="blush-left"></div> <div class="beak-top"></div> <div class="beak-bottom"></div> </div> </div>