Difference between revisions of "Standard CSS"
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==[[#Pop Up Tool Tip|Back To Top]]-[[Main_Page| Home]] - [[Css|Category]]== | ==[[#Pop Up Tool Tip|Back To Top]]-[[Main_Page| Home]] - [[Css|Category]]== |
Revision as of 15:52, 28 December 2020
Pop Up Tool Tip
HTML
<div class="couponcode">First Link <span class="coupontooltip"><a href="http://www.outwater.com">click below</a> to continue and some more text</span> </div> <div class="couponcode">Second Link <span class="coupontooltip"> Content 2</span> </div> <div class="menu"> <ul> <li> one</li> <li class="two"> one</li> <li class="two"> one</li> </ul> </div>
CSS
.couponcode:hover .coupontooltip { display: block; } .coupontooltip { display: none; background: teal; margin-left: 8px; padding: 10px; position: absolute; z-index: 1000; width:200px; height:100px; line-height:26px; } .couponcode { margin:100px; } .menu > ul { list-style-type:none; display:none; } .menu:hover ul > li { display:inline-block; }
Tabs
HTML
<div class="tabs"> <div class="tab"> <input type="radio" id="tab-1" name="tab-group-1" checked> <label for="tab-1">Tab One</label> <div class="content"> Tab 1 </div> </div> <div class="tab"> <input type="radio" id="tab-2" name="tab-group-1"> <label for="tab-2">Tab Two</label> <div class="content"> Tab2 </div> </div> <div class="tab"> <input type="radio" id="tab-3" name="tab-group-1"> <label for="tab-3">Tab Three</label> <div class="content"> tab3 </div> </div> </div> ===CSS===
.tabs { position: relative; min-height: 200px; /* This part sucks */ clear: both; margin: 25px 0; } .tab { float: left; } .tab label { background: white; padding: 10px; border: 1px solid #ccc; margin-left: -1px; position: relative; left: 1px; } .tab [type=radio] { display: none; } .content { position: absolute; top: 28px; left: 0; background: white; right: 0; bottom: 0; padding: 20px; border: 1px solid #ccc; } [type=radio]:checked ~ label { background: teal; border-bottom: 1px solid white; z-index: 2; } [type=radio]:checked ~ label ~ .content { z-index: 1; }
Attribute Selectors
Css [attribute] Selector The [attribute] selector is used to select elements with a specified attribute. The following example selects all <a> elements with a target attribute a[target] { background-color: yellow; } CSS [attribute=value] Selector The [attribute=value] selector is used to select elements with a specified attribute and value. The following example selects all <a> elements with a target="_blank" attribute: a[target="_blank"] { background-color: yellow; } CSS [attribute~=value] Selector The [attribute~=value] selector is used to select elements with an attribute value containing a specified word. The following example selects all elements with a title attribute that contains a space-separated list of words, one of which is "flower" [title~="flower"] { border: 5px solid yellow; } The example above will match elements with title="flower", title="summer flower", and title="flower new", but not title="my-flower" or title="flowers". CSS [attribute|=value] Selector The [attribute|=value] selector is used to select elements with the specified attribute starting with the specified value. The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that begins with "top": Note: The value has to be a whole word, either alone, like class="top", or followed by a hyphen( - ), like class="top-text"! [class|="top"] { background: yellow; } CSS [attribute^=value] Selector he [attribute^=value] selector is used to select elements whose attribute value begins with a specified value. The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that begins with "top": Note: The value does not have to be a whole word! [class^="top"] { background: yellow; } CSS [attribute$=value] Selector The [attribute$=value] selector is used to select elements whose attribute value ends with a specified value. The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that ends with "test": Note: The value does not have to be a whole word! [class$="test"] { background: yellow; } CSS [attribute*=value] Selector The [attribute*=value] selector is used to select elements whose attribute value contains a specified value. The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that contains "te": Note: The value does not have to be a whole word! [class*="te"] { background: yellow; } Styling Forms The attribute selectors can be useful for styling forms without class or ID: input[type="text"] { width: 150px; display: block; margin-bottom: 10px; background-color: yellow; } input[type="button"] { width: 120px; margin-left: 35px; display: block; }