Css Handbook
Css Handbook
of Contents
Preface
Introduction to CSS
A brief history of CSS
Adding CSS to an HTML page
Selectors
Cascade
Specificity
Inheritance
Import
Attribute selectors
Pseudo-classes
Pseudo-elements
Colors
Units
url
calc
Backgrounds
Comments
Custom Properties
Fonts
Typography
Box Model
Border
Padding
Margin
Box Sizing
Display
Positioning
Floating and clearing
z-index
2
CSS Grid
Flexbox
Tables
Centering
Lists
Media queries and responsive design
Feature Queries
Filters
Transforms
Transitions
Animations
Normalizing CSS
Error handling
Vendor prefixes
CSS for print
3
Preface
Preface
Welcome!
I wrote this book to help you quickly learn CSS and get familiar with the advanced CSS topics.
CSS, a shorthand for Cascading Style Sheets, is one of the main building blocks of the Web.
Its history goes back to the 90's and along with HTML it has changed a lot since its humble
beginnings.
Having created websites since before CSS existed, I have seen its evolution.
CSS is an amazing tool, and in the last few years it has grown a lot, introducing many fantastic
features like CSS Grid, Flexbox and CSS Custom Properties.
First, the beginner. I explain CSS from zero in a succinct but comprehensive way, so you can
use this book to learn CSS from the basics.
Then, the professional. CSS is often considered like a secondary thing to learn, especially by
JavaScript developers. They know CSS is not a real programming language, they are
programmers and therefore they should not bother learning CSS the right way. I wrote this
book for you, too.
Next, the person that knows CSS from a few years but hasn't had the opportunity to learn the
new things in it. We'll talk extensively about the new features of CSS, the ones that are going
to build the web of the next decade.
CSS has improved a lot in the past few years and it's evolving fast.
Even if you don't write CSS for a living, knowing how CSS works can help save you some
headaches when you need to understand it from time to time, for example while tweaking a
web page.
Thank you for getting this ebook. My goal with it is to give you a quick yet comprehensive
overview of CSS.
Flavio
My website is flaviocopes.com.
4
Preface
5
Introduction to CSS
Introduction to CSS
CSS (an abbreviation of Cascading Style Sheets) is the language that we use to style an
HTML file, and tell the browser how should it render the elements on the page.
In this book I talk exclusively about styling HTML documents, although CSS can be used
to style other things too.
the selector
the declaration block
The selector is a string that identifies one or more elements on the page, following a special
syntax that we'll soon talk about extensively.
The declaration block contains one or more declarations, in turn composed by a property
and value pair.
Carefully organising properties, associating them values, and attaching those to specific
elements of the page using a selector is the whole argument of this ebook.
In this example, p is the selector, and applies one rule which sets the value 20px to the
font-size property:
p {
font-size: 20px;
}
p {
font-size: 20px;
}
a {
6
Introduction to CSS
color: blue;
}
p, a {
font-size: 20px;
}
and it can target HTML tags, like above, or HTML elements that contain a certain class
attribute with .my-class , or HTML elements that have a specific id attribute with #my-id .
More advanced selectors allow you to choose items whose attribute matches a specific value,
or also items which respond to pseudo-classes (more on that later)
Semicolons
Every CSS rule terminates with a semicolon. Semicolons are not optional, except after the last
rule, but I suggest to always use them for consistency and to avoid errors if you add another
property and forget to add the semicolon on the previous line.
p
{
font-size: 20px ;
}
a{color:blue;}
but a pain to see. Stick to some conventions, like the ones you see in the examples above:
stick selectors and the closing brackets to the left, indent 2 spaces for each rule, have the
opening bracket on the same line of the selector, separated by one space.
Correct and consistent use of spacing and indentation is a visual aid in understanding your
code.
7
Introduction to CSS
8
A brief history of CSS
CSS was grown out of the necessity of styling web pages. Before CSS was introduced, people
wanted a way to style their web pages, which looked all very similar and "academic" back in
the day. You couldn't do much in terms of personalisation.
HTML 3.2 introduced the option of defining colors inline as HTML element attributes, and
presentational tags like center and font , but that escalated quickly into a far from ideal
situation.
CSS let us move everything presentation-related from the HTML to the CSS, so that HTML
could get back being the format that defines the structure of the document, rather than how
things should look in the browser.
CSS is continuously evolving, and CSS you used 5 years ago might just be outdated, as new
idiomatic CSS techniques emerged and browsers changed.
It's hard to imagine the times when CSS was born and how different the web was.
At the time, we had several competing browsers, the main ones being Internet Explorer or
Netscape Navigator.
Pages were styled by using HTML, with special presentational tags like bold and special
attributes, most of which are now deprecated.
Also, you built a site specifically for one of them, because each one introduced different non-
standard tags to give more power and opportunities.
Soon people realised the need for a way to style pages, in a way that would work across all
browsers.
After the initial idea proposed in 1994, CSS got its first release in 1996, when the CSS Level 1
("CSS 1") recommendation was published.
Since then, work began on CSS Level 3. The CSS Working Group decided to split every
feature and work on it separately, in modules.
9
A brief history of CSS
Browsers weren't especially fast at implementing CSS. We had to wait until 2002 to have the
first browser implement the full CSS specification: IE for Mac, as nicely described in this CSS
Tricks post: https://css-tricks.com/look-back-history-css/
Internet Explorer implemented the box model incorrectly right from the start, which led to years
of pain trying to have the same style applied consistently across browsers. We had to use
various tricks and hacks to make browsers render things as we wanted.
Today things are much, much better. We can just use the CSS standards without thinking
about quirks, most of the time, and CSS has never been more powerful.
We don't have official release numbers for CSS any more now, but the CSS Working Group
releases a "snapshot" of the modules that are currently considered stable and ready to be
included in browsers. This is the latest snapshot, from 2018: https://www.w3.org/TR/css-2018/
CSS Level 2 is still the base for the CSS we write today, and we have many more features
built on top of it.
10
Adding CSS to an HTML page
To use this method, you add a link tag with the href attribute pointing to the CSS file you
want to include. You add it inside the head tag of the site (not inside the body tag):
The rel and type attributes are required too, as they tell the browser which kind of file we
are linking to.
<style>
...our CSS...
</style>
Using this method we can avoid creating a separate CSS file. I find this is a good way to
experiment before "formalising" CSS to a separate file, or to add a special line of CSS just to a
file.
3: inline styles
Inline styles are the third way to add CSS to a page. We can add a style attribute to any
HTML tag, and add CSS into it.
<div style="">...</div>
11
Adding CSS to an HTML page
Example:
12
Selectors
Selectors
A selector allows us to associate one or more declarations to one or more elements on the
page.
Basic selectors
Suppose we have a p element on the page, and we want to display the words into it using
the yellow color.
We can target that element using this selector p , which targets all the element using the p
tag in the page. A simple CSS rule to achieve what we want is:
p {
color: yellow;
}
Every HTML tag has a corresponding selector, for example: div , span , img .
If a selector matches multiple elements, all the elements in the page will be affected by the
change.
HTML elements have 2 attributes which are very commonly used within CSS to associate
styling to a specific element on the page: class and id .
There is one big difference between those two: inside an HTML document you can repeat the
same class value across multiple elements, but you can only use an id once. As a
corollary, using classes you can select an element with 2 or more specific class names,
something not possible using ids.
Classes are identified using the . symbol, while ids using the # symbol.
<p class="dog-name">
Roger
</p>
.dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
13
Selectors
<p id="dog-name">
Roger
</p>
#dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
Combining selectors
So far we've seen how to target an element, a class or an id. Let's introduce more powerful
selectors.
<p class="dog-name">
Roger
</p>
p.dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
<p id="dog-name">
Roger
</p>
p#dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
Why would you want to do that, if the class or id already provides a way to target that
element? You might have to do that to have more specificity. We'll see what that means later.
14
Selectors
Example:
.dog-name.roger {
color: yellow;
}
Example:
.dog-name#roger {
color: yellow;
}
Grouping selectors
You can combine selectors to apply the same declarations to multiple selectors. To do so, you
separate them with a comma.
Example:
<p>
My dog name is:
</p>
<span class="dog-name">
Roger
</span>
15
Selectors
p, .dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
You can add spaces in those declarations to make them more clear:
p,
.dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
You can create a more specific selector by combining multiple items to follow the document
tree structure. For example, if you have a span tag nested inside a p tag, you can target
that one without applying the style to a span tag not included in a p tag:
<span>
Hello!
</span>
<p>
My dog name is:
<span class="dog-name">
Roger
</span>
</p>
p span {
color: yellow;
}
See how we used a space between the two tokens p and span .
This works even if the element on the right is multiple levels deep.
To make the dependency strict on the first level, you can use the > symbol between the two
tokens:
p > span {
color: yellow;
}
16
Selectors
In this case, if a span is not a first children of the p element, it's not going to have the new
color applied.
<p>
<span>
This is yellow
</span>
<strong>
<span>
This is not yellow
</span>
</strong>
</p>
Adjacent sibling selectors let us style an element only if preceded by a specific element. We
do so using the + operator:
Example:
p + span {
color: yellow;
}
This will assign the color yellow to all span elements preceded by a p element:
<p>This is a paragraph</p>
<span>This is a yellow span</span>
attribute selectors
pseudo class selectors
pseudo element selectors
17
Cascade
Cascade
Cascade is a fundamental concept of CSS. After all, it's in the name itself, the first C of CSS -
Cascading Style Sheets - it must be an important thing.
Cascade is the process, or algorithm, that determines the properties applied to each element
on the page. Trying to converge from a list of CSS rules that are defined in various places.
specificity
importance
inheritance
order in the file
Two or more competing CSS rules for the same property applied to the same element need to
be elaborated according to the CSS spec, to determine which one needs to be applied.
Even if you just have one CSS file loaded by your page, there is other CSS that is going to be
part of the process. We have the browser (user agent) CSS. Browsers come with a default set
of rules, all different between browsers.
Then the browser applies any user stylesheet, which might also be applied by browser
extensions.
All those rules come into play while rendering the page.
18
Specificity
Specificity
What happens when an element is targeted by multiple rules, with different selectors, that
affect the same property?
<p class="dog-name">
Roger
</p>
We can have
.dog-name {
color: yellow;
}
and another rule that targets p , which sets the color to another value:
p {
color: red;
}
And another rule that targets p.dog-name . Which rule is going to take precedence over the
others, and why?
Enter specificity. The more specific rule will win. If two or more rules have the same
specificity, the one that appears last wins.
Sometimes what is more specific in practice is a bit confusing to beginners. I would say it's
also confusing to experts that do not look at those rules that frequently, or simply overlook
them.
We have 4 slots, and each one of them starts at 0: 0 0 0 0 0 . The slot at the left is the most
important, and the rightmost one is the least important.
19
Specificity
Slot 1
The first slot, the rightmost one, is the least important.
We increase this value when we have an element selector. An element is a tag name. If you
have more than one element selector in the rule, you increment accordingly the value stored in
this slot.
Examples:
p {} /* 0 0 0 1 */
span {} /* 0 0 0 1 */
p span {} /* 0 0 0 2 */
p > span {} /* 0 0 0 2 */
div p > span {} /* 0 0 0 3 */
Slot 2
The second slot is incremented by 3 things:
class selectors
pseudo-class selectors
attribute selectors
Every time a rule meets one of those, we increment the value of the second column from the
right.
Examples:
.name {} /* 0 0 1 0 */
.users .name {} /* 0 0 2 0 */
[href$='.pdf'] {} /* 0 0 1 0 */
:hover {} /* 0 0 1 0 */
div .name {} /* 0 0 1 1 */
a[href$='.pdf'] {} /* 0 0 1 1 */
.pictures img:hover {} /* 0 0 2 1 */
One nice trick with classes is that you can repeat the same class and increase the specificity.
For example:
.name {} /* 0 0 1 0 */
.name.name {} /* 0 0 2 0 */
.name.name.name {} /* 0 0 3 0 */
20
Specificity
Slot 3
Slot 3 holds the most important thing that can affect your CSS specificity in a CSS file: the
id .
Every element can have an id attribute assigned, and we can use that in our stylesheet to
target the element.
Examples:
#name {} /* 0 1 0 0 */
.user #name {} /* 0 1 1 0 */
#name span {} /* 0 1 0 1 */
Slot 4
Slot 4 is affected by inline styles. Any inline style will have precedence over any rule defined in
an external CSS file, or inside the style tag in the page header.
Example:
Even if any other rule in the CSS defines the color, this inline style rule is going to be applied.
Except for one case - if !important is used, which fills the slot 5.
Importance
Specificity does not matter if a rule ends with !important :
p {
font-size: 20px!important;
}
That rule will take precedence over any rule with more specificity
Adding !important in a CSS rule is going to make that rule be more important than any other
rule, according to the specificity rules. The only way another rule can take precedence is to
have !important as well, and have higher specificity in the other less important slots.
Tips
21
Specificity
In general you should use the amount of specificity you need, but not more. In this way, you
can craft other selectors to overwrite the rules set by preceding rules without going mad.
!important is a highly debated tool that CSS offers us. Many CSS experts advocate against
using it. I find myself using it especially when trying out some style and a CSS rule has so
much specificity that I need to use !important to make the browser apply my new CSS.
Using the id attribute to style CSS is also debated a lot, since it has a very high specificity. A
good alternative is to use classes instead, which have less specificity, and so they are easier
to work with, and they are more powerful (you can have multiple classes for an element, and a
class can be reused multiple times).
It's useful especially if you are trying to figure things out, as it can be a nice feedback tool.
22
Inheritance
Inheritance
When you set some properties on a selector in CSS, they are inherited by all the children of
that selector.
This happens because some properties make sense to be inherited. This helps us write CSS
much more concisely, since we don't have to explicitly set that property again on every single
children.
Think about fonts: you don't need to apply the font-family to every single tag of your page.
You set the body tag font, and every children inherits it, along with other properties.
The background-color property, on the other hand, makes little sense to be inherited.
border-collapse
border-spacing
caption-side
color
cursor
direction
empty-cells
font-family
font-size
font-style
font-variant
font-weight
font-size-adjust
font-stretch
font
letter-spacing
line-height
list-style-image
23
Inheritance
list-style-position
list-style-type
list-style
orphans
quotes
tab-size
text-align
text-align-last
text-decoration-color
text-indent
text-justify
text-shadow
text-transform
visibility
white-space
widows
word-break
word-spacing
In the children, you set the property value to the special keyword inherit .
Example:
body {
background-color: yellow;
}
p {
background-color: inherit;
}
24
Inheritance
You can use the revert keyword to revert it. In this case, the value is reverted to the original
value the browser gave it in its default stylesheet.
In practice this is rarely used, and most of the times you'll just set another value for the
property to overwrite that inherited value.
initial : use the default browser stylesheet if available. If not, and if the property inherits
25
Import
Import
From any CSS file you can import another CSS file using the @import directive.
@import url(myfile.css)
One important thing you need to know is that @import directives must be put before any other
CSS in the file, or they will be ignored.
You can use media descriptors to only load a CSS file on the specific media:
26
Attribute selectors
Attribute selectors
We already introduced several of the basic CSS selectors: using element selectors, class, id,
how to combine them, how to target multiple classes, how to style several selectors in the
same rule, how to follow the page hierarchy with child and direct child selectors, and adjacent
siblings.
In this section we'll analyze attribute selectors, and we'll talk about pseudo class and pseudo
element selectors in the next 2 sections.
We can check if an element has an attribute using the [] syntax. p[id] will select all p
tags in the page that have an id attribute, regardless of its value:
p[id] {
/* ... */
}
p[id="my-id"] {
/* ... */
}
|= checks if the attribute starts with the partial and it's followed by a dash (common in
27
Attribute selectors
~= checks if the partial is contained in the attribute, but separated by spaces from the
rest
If you add an i just before the closing bracket, the check will be case insensitive. It's
supported in many browsers but not in all, check https://caniuse.com/#feat=css-case-
insensitive.
28
Pseudo-classes
Pseudo-classes
Pseudo classes are predefined keywords that are used to select an element based on its
state, or to target a specific child.
They can be used as part of a selector, and they are very useful to style active or visited links
for example, change the style on hover, focus, or target the first child, or odd rows. Very handy
in many cases.
These are the most popular pseudo classes you will likely use:
Pseudo
Targets
class
:active
an element being activated by the user (e.g. clicked). Mostly used on
links or buttons
:checked a checkbox, option or radio input types that are enabled
:default the default in a set of choices (like, option in a select or radio buttons)
:disabled an element disabled
:empty an element with no children
:enabled an element that's enabled (opposite to :disabled )
:first-
child the first child of a group of siblings
:target
the element matching the current URL fragment (for inner navigation in
the page)
29
Pseudo-classes
Let's do an example. A common one, actually. You want to style a link, so you create a CSS
rule to target the a element:
a {
color: yellow;
}
Things seem to work fine, until you click one link. The link goes back to the predefined color
(blue) when you click it. Then when you open the link and go back to the page, now the link is
blue.
Because the link when clicked changes state, and goes in the :active state. And when it's
been visited, it is in the :visited state. Forever, until the user clears the browsing history.
So, to correctly make the link yellow across all states, you need to write
a,
a:visited,
a:active {
color: yellow;
}
:nth-child() deserves a special mention. It can be used to target odd or even children with
It is commonly used in lists to color odd lines differently from even lines:
ul:nth-child(odd) {
color: white;
background-color: black;
}
You can also use it to target the first 3 children of an element with :nth-child(-n+3) . Or you
can style 1 in every 5 elements with :nth-child(5n) .
Some pseudo classes are just used for printing, like :first , :left , :right , so you can
target the first page, all the left pages, and all the right pages, which are usually styled slightly
differently.
30
Pseudo-classes
31
Pseudo-elements
Pseudo-elements
Pseudo-elements are used to style a specific part of an element.
Sometimes you will spot them in the wild with a single colon, but this is only a syntax
supported for backwards compatibility reasons. You should use 2 colons to distinguish
them from pseudo-classes.
::before and ::after are probably the most used pseudo-elements. They are used to add
Pseudo-element Targets
::after creates a pseudo-element after the element
::before creates a pseudo-element before the element
::first-letter can be used to style the first letter of a block of text
::first-line can be used to style the first line of a block of text
::selection targets the text selected by the user
Let's do an example. Say you want to make the first line of a paragraph slightly bigger in font
size, a common thing in typography:
p::first-line {
font-size: 2rem;
}
p::first-letter {
font-weight: bolder;
}
::after and ::before are a bit less intuitive. I remember using them when I had to add
You specify the content property to insert any kind of content after or before an element:
p::before {
content: url(/myimage.png);
}
32
Pseudo-elements
.myElement::before {
content: "Hey Hey!";
}
33
Colors
Colors
By default an HTML page is rendered by web browsers quite sadly in terms of the colors used.
We have a white background, black color, and blue links. That's it.
color
background-color
border-color
Named colors
First, we have CSS keywords that define colors. CSS started with 16, but today there is a
huge number of colors names:
aliceblue
antiquewhite
aqua
aquamarine
azure
beige
bisque
black
blanchedalmond
blue
blueviolet
brown
burlywood
cadetblue
chartreuse
chocolate
coral
cornflowerblue
cornsilk
crimson
34
Colors
cyan
darkblue
darkcyan
darkgoldenrod
darkgray
darkgreen
darkgrey
darkkhaki
darkmagenta
darkolivegreen
darkorange
darkorchid
darkred
darksalmon
darkseagreen
darkslateblue
darkslategray
darkslategrey
darkturquoise
darkviolet
deeppink
deepskyblue
dimgray
dimgrey
dodgerblue
firebrick
floralwhite
forestgreen
fuchsia
gainsboro
ghostwhite
gold
goldenrod
gray
green
greenyellow
grey
honeydew
hotpink
indianred
35
Colors
indigo
ivory
khaki
lavender
lavenderblush
lawngreen
lemonchiffon
lightblue
lightcoral
lightcyan
lightgoldenrodyellow
lightgray
lightgreen
lightgrey
lightpink
lightsalmon
lightseagreen
lightskyblue
lightslategray
lightslategrey
lightsteelblue
lightyellow
lime
limegreen
linen
magenta
maroon
mediumaquamarine
mediumblue
mediumorchid
mediumpurple
mediumseagreen
mediumslateblue
mediumspringgreen
mediumturquoise
mediumvioletred
midnightblue
mintcream
mistyrose
moccasin
36
Colors
navajowhite
navy
oldlace
olive
olivedrab
orange
orangered
orchid
palegoldenrod
palegreen
paleturquoise
palevioletred
papayawhip
peachpuff
peru
pink
plum
powderblue
purple
rebeccapurple
red
rosybrown
royalblue
saddlebrown
salmon
sandybrown
seagreen
seashell
sienna
silver
skyblue
slateblue
slategray
slategrey
snow
springgreen
steelblue
tan
teal
thistle
37
Colors
tomato
turquoise
violet
wheat
white
whitesmoke
yellow
yellowgreen
plus tranparent , and currentColor which points to the color property, for example useful to
make the border-color inherit it.
They are defined in the CSS Color Module, Level 4. They are case insensitive.
Wikipedia has a nice table which lets you pick the perfect color by its name.
p {
color: rgb(255, 255, 255); /* white */
background-color: rgb(0, 0, 0); /* black */
}
rgba() lets you add the alpha channel to enter a transparent part. That can be a number from
0 to 1:
p {
background-color: rgb(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
}
Hexadecimal notation
Another option is to express the RGB parts of the colors in the hexadecimal notation, which is
composed by 3 blocks.
Black, which is rgb(0,0,0) is expressed as #000000 or #000 (we can shortcut the 2
numbers to 1 if they are equal).
38
Colors
The hexadecimal notation lets express a number from 0 to 255 in just 2 digits, since they can
go from 0 to "15" (f).
We can add the alpha channel by adding 1 or 2 more digits at the end, for example
#00000033 . Not all browsers support the shortened notation, so use all 6 digits to express the
RGB part.
In this notation, black is hsl(0, 0%, 0%) and white is hsl(0, 0%, 100%) .
If you are more familiar with HSL than RGB because of your past knowledge, you can
definitely use that.
You also have hsla() which adds the alpha channel to the mix, again a number from 0 to 1:
hsl(0, 0%, 0%, 0.5)
39
Units
Units
One of the things you'll use every day in CSS are units. They are used to set lengths,
paddings, margins, align elements and so on.
They are everywhere. There are some obscure ones, too. We'll go through each of them in
this section.
Pixels
The most widely used measurement unit. A pixel does not actually correlate to a physical pixel
on your screen, as that varies, a lot, by device (think high-DPI devices vs non-retina devices).
There is a convention that make this unit work consistently across devices.
Percentages
Another very useful measure, percentages let you specify values in percentages of that parent
element's corresponding property.
Example:
.parent {
width: 400px;
}
.child {
width: 50%; /* = 200px */
}
mm a millimeter (0.1cm)
q a quarter of a millimeter
40
Units
Relative units
em is the value assigned to that element's font-size , therefore its exact value changes
between elements. It does not change depending on the font used, just on the font size. In
typography this measures the width of the m letter.
rem is similar to em , but instead of varying on the current element font size, it uses the
root element ( html ) font size. You set that font size once, and rem will be a consistent
measure across all the page.
ex is like em , but inserted of measuring the width of m , it measures the height of the
x letter. It can change depending on the font used, and on the font size.
(zero).
Viewport units
vw the viewport width unit represents a percentage of the viewport width. 50vw means
in terms of percentage. 30vmin is the 30% of the current width or height, depending
which one is smaller
vmax the viewport maximum unit represents the maximum between the height or width
in terms of percentage. 30vmax is the 30% of the current width or height, depending
which one is bigger
Fraction units
fr are fraction units, and they are used in CSS Grid to divide space into fractions.
We'll talk about them in the context of CSS Grid later on.
41
url
url
When we talk about background images, @import , and more, we use the url() function to
load a resource:
div {
background-image: url(test.png);
}
In this case I used a relative URL, which searches the file in the folder where the CSS file is
defined.
div {
background-image: url(../test.png);
}
or go into a folder
div {
background-image: url(subfolder/test.png);
}
Or I could load a file starting from the root of the domain where the CSS is hosted:
div {
background-image: url(/test.png);
}
div {
background-image: url(https://mysite.com/test.png);
}
42
calc
calc
The calc() function lets you perform basic math operations on values, and it's especially
useful when you need to add or subtract a length value from a percentage.
div {
max-width: calc(80% - 100px)
}
It returns a length value, so it can be used anywhere you expect a pixel value.
additions using +
subtractions using -
multiplication using *
division using /
One caveat: with addition and subtraction, the space around the operator is mandatory,
otherwise it does not work as expected.
Examples:
div {
max-width: calc(50% / 3)
}
div {
max-width: calc(50% + 3px)
}
43
Backgrounds
Backgrounds
The background of an element can be changed using several CSS properties:
background-color
background-image
background-clip
background-position
background-origin
background-repeat
background-attachment
background-size
and the shorthand property background , which allows to shorten definitions and group them
on a single line.
background-color accepts a color value, which can be one of the color keywords, or an rgb
or hsl value:
p {
background-color: yellow;
}
div {
background-color: #333;
}
Instead of using a color, you can use an image as background to an element, by specifying the
image location URL:
div {
background-image: url(image.png);
}
background-clip lets you determine the area used by the background image, or color. The
padding-box to extend the background up to the padding edge, without the border
content-box to extend the background up to the content edge, without the padding
44
Backgrounds
When using an image as background you will want to set the position of the image placement
using the background-position property: left , right , center are all valid values for the X
axis, and top , bottom for the Y axis:
div {
background-position: top right;
}
If the image is smaller than the background, you need to set the behavior using background-
repeat . Should it repeat-x , repeat-y or repeat on all the axis? This last one is the default
background-origin lets you choose where the background should be applied: to the entire
element including padding (default) using padding-box , to the entire element including the
border using border-box , to the element without the padding using content-box .
With background-attachment we can attach the background to the viewport, so that scrolling
will not affect the background:
div {
background-attachment: fixed;
}
By default the value is scroll . There is another value, local . The best way to visualize their
behavior is this Codepen.
The last background property is background-size . We can use 3 keywords: auto , cover and
contain . auto is the default.
cover expands the image until the entire element is covered by the background.
contain stops expanding the background image when one dimension (x or y) covers the
whole smallest edge of the image, so it's fully contained into the element.
You can also specify a length value, and if so it sets the width of the background image (and
the height is automatically defined):
div {
background-size: 100%;
}
If you specify 2 values, one is the width and the second is the height:
div {
background-size: 800px 600px;
45
Backgrounds
The shorthand property background allows to shorten definitions and group them on a single
line.
This is an example:
div {
background: url(bg.png) top left no-repeat;
}
If you use an image, and the image could not be loaded, you can set a fallback color:
div {
background: url(image.png) yellow;
}
div {
background: linear-gradient(#fff, #333);
}
46
Comments
Comments
CSS gives you the ability to write comments in a CSS file, or in the style tag in the page
header
The format is the /* this is a comment */ C-style (or JavaScript-style, if you prefer)
comments.
This is a multiline comment. Until you add the closing */ token, the all the lines found after
the opening one are commented.
Example:
#name {
display: block; /*
color: red;
*/
}
Pay attention though - if you add // before a rule, the rule will not be applied, looking like the
comment worked. In reality, CSS detected a syntax error and due to how it works it ignored
the line with the error, and went straight to the next line.
Knowing this approach lets you purposefully write inline comments, although you have to be
careful because you can't add random text like you can in a block comment.
For example:
// Nice rule!
#name { display: block; }
In this case, due to how CSS works, the #name rule is actually commented out. You can find
more details here if you find this interesting. To avoid shooting yourself in the foot, just avoid
using inline comments and rely on block comments.
47
Custom Properties
Custom Properties
In the last few years CSS preprocessors had a lot of success. It was very common for
greenfield projects to start with Less or Sass. And it's still a very popular technology.
Modern CSS has a new powerful feature called CSS Custom Properties, also commonly
known as CSS Variables.
CSS is not a programming language like JavaScript, Python, PHP, Ruby or Go where
variables are key to do something useful. CSS is very limited in what it can do, and it's mainly
a declarative syntax to tell browsers how they should display an HTML page.
But a variable is a variable: a name that refers to a value, and variables in CSS helps reduce
repetition and inconsistencies in your CSS, by centralizing the values definition.
And it introduces a unique feature that CSS preprocessors won't never have: you can access
and change the value of a CSS Variable programmatically using JavaScript.
:root {
--primary-color: yellow;
}
p {
color: var(--primary-color)
}
The variable value can be any valid CSS value, for example:
48
Custom Properties
:root {
--default-padding: 30px 30px 20px 20px;
--default-color: red;
--default-background: #fff;
}
:root {
--default-color: red;
}
body {
--default-color: red;
}
main {
--default-color: red;
}
p {
--default-color: red;
}
span {
--default-color: red;
}
a:hover {
--default-color: red;
}
Variables scope
Adding variables to a selector makes them available to all the children of it.
In the example above you saw the use of :root when defining a CSS variable:
:root {
--primary-color: yellow;
}
49
Custom Properties
In the context of an HTML document, using the :root selector points to the html element,
except that :root has higher specificity (takes priority).
Adding a CSS custom property to :root makes it available to all the elements in the page.
If you add a variable inside a .container selector, it's only going to be available to children of
.container :
.container {
--secondary-color: yellow;
}
:root {
--primary-color: yellow;
}
.container {
--primary-color: blue;
}
You can also assign or overwrite a variable inside the HTML using inline styles:
CSS Variables follow the normal CSS cascading rules, with precedence set according to
specificity
50
Custom Properties
element.style.setProperty('--variable-name', 'a-value')
This code below can be used to access a variable value instead, in case the variable is
defined on :root :
Or, to get the style applied to a specific element, in case of variables set with a different scope:
For example you might pass a pixel value to a position property, or a rem value to a color
property.
Browser support
Browser support for CSS Variables is very good, according to Can I Use.
CSS Variables are here to stay, and you can use them today if you don't need to support
Internet Explorer and old versions of the other browsers.
If you need to support older browsers you can use libraries like PostCSS or Myth, but you'll
lose the ability to interact with variables via JavaScript or the Browser Developer Tools, as
they are transpiled to good old variable-less CSS (and as such, you lose most of the power of
CSS Variables).
--width: 100px;
51
Custom Properties
is different than:
--Width: 100px;
:root {
--default-left-padding: calc(10px * 2);
}
body {
--width: 500px;
}
.container {
width: var(--width);
}
.container {
margin: var(--default-margin, 30px);
}
52
Custom Properties
53
Fonts
Fonts
At the dawn of the web you only had a handful of fonts you could choose from.
Thankfully today you can load any kind of font on your pages.
CSS has gained many nice capabilities over the years in regards to fonts.
font-family
font-weight
font-stretch
font-style
font-size
Let's see each one of them and then we'll cover font .
Then we'll talk about how to load custom fonts, using @import or @font-face , or by loading a
font stylesheet.
font-family
Why "family"? Because what we know as a font is actually composed of several sub-fonts.
which provide all the style (bold, italic, light..) we need.
Here's an example from my Mac's Font Book app - the Fira Code font family hosts several
dedicated fonts underneath:
54
Fonts
body {
font-family: Helvetica;
}
You can set multiple values, so the second option will be used if the first cannot be used for
some reason (if it's not found on the machine, or the network connection to download the font
failed, for example):
body {
font-family: Helvetica, Arial;
}
I used some specific fonts up to now, ones we call Web Safe Fonts, as they are pre-installed
on different operating systems.
We divide them in Serif, Sans-Serif, and Monospace fonts. Here's a list of some of the most
popular ones:
Serif
Georgia
Palatino
Times New Roman
Times
Sans-Serif
55
Fonts
Arial
Helvetica
Verdana
Geneva
Tahoma
Lucida Grande
Impact
Trebuchet MS
Arial Black
Monospace
Courier New
Courier
Lucida Console
Monaco
You can use all of those as font-family properties, but they are not guaranteed to be there
for every system. Others exist, too, with a varying level of support.
Those are typically used at the end of a font-family definition, to provide a fallback value in
case nothing else can be applied:
body {
font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
}
font-weight
This property sets the width of a font. You can use those predefined values:
normal
bold
bolder (relative to the parent element)
lighter (relative to the parent element)
56
Fonts
100
200
300
400, mapped to normal
500
600
700 mapped to bold
800
900
Some of those numeric values might not map to a font, because that must be provided in the
font family. When one is missing, CSS makes that number be at least as bold as the preceding
one, so you might have numbers that point to the same font.
font-stretch
ultra-condensed
extra-condensed
condensed
semi-condensed
normal
semi-expanded
expanded
extra-expanded
ultra-expanded
font-style
p {
font-style: italic;
}
57
Fonts
This property also allows the values oblique and normal . There is very little, if any,
difference between using italic and oblique . The first is easier to me, as HTML already
offers an i element which means italic.
font-size
xx-small
x-small
small
medium
large
x-large
xx-large
smaller (relative to the parent element)
larger (relative to the parent element)
Usage:
p {
font-size: 20px;
}
li {
font-size: medium;
}
font-variant
This property was originally used to change the text to small caps, and it had just 3 valid
values:
normal
inherit
small-caps
58
Fonts
Small caps means the text is rendered in "smaller caps" beside its uppercase letters.
font
The font property lets you apply different font properties in a single one, reducing the clutter.
We must at least set 2 properties, font-size and font-family , the others are optional:
body {
font: 20px Helvetica;
}
Example:
body {
font: italic bold 20px Helvetica;
}
section {
font: small-caps bold 20px Helvetica;
}
This font will be downloaded by the browser and used in the page, and it's been such a
fundamental change to typography on the web - we can now use any font we want.
We can add @font-face declarations directly into our CSS, or link to a CSS dedicated to
importing the font.
In our CSS file we can also use @import to load that CSS file.
A @font-face declaration contains several properties we use to define the font, including
src , the URI (one or more URIs) to the font. This follows the same-origin policy, which
means fonts can only be downloaded form the current origin (domain + port + protocol).
59
Fonts
The following properties allow us to define the properties to the font we are going to load, as
we saw above:
font-family
font-weight
font-style
font-stretch
A note on performance
Of course loading a font has performance implications which you must consider when creating
the design of your page.
60
Typography
Typography
We already talked about fonts, but there's more to styling text.
text-transform
text-decoration
text-align
vertical-align
line-height
text-indent
text-align-last
word-spacing
letter-spacing
text-shadow
white-space
tab-size
writing-mode
hyphens
text-orientation
direction
line-break
word-break
overflow-wrap
text-transform
none to disable transforming the text, used to avoid inheriting the property
Example:
p {
text-transform: uppercase;
}
61
Typography
text-decoration
underline
overline
line-through
blink
none
Example:
p {
text-decoration: underline;
}
You can also set the style of the decoration, and the color.
Example:
p {
text-decoration: underline dashed yellow;
}
text-decoration-line
text-decoration-color
text-decoration-style
Example:
p {
text-decoration-line: underline;
text-decoration-color: yellow;
text-decoration-style: dashed;
}
text-align
62
Typography
By default text align has the start value, meaning the text starts at the "start", origin 0, 0 of
the box that contains it. This means top left in left-to-right languages, and top right in right-to-
left languages.
Possible values are start , end , left , right , center , justify (nice to have a consistent
spacing at the line ends):
p {
text-align: right;
}
vertical-align
We have several values for this property. First we can assign a length or percentage value.
Those are used to align the text in a position higher or lower (using negative values) than the
baseline of the parent element.
baseline (the default), aligns the baseline to the baseline of the parent element
sub makes an element subscripted, simulating the sub HTML element result
super makes an element superscripted, simulating the sup HTML element result
top align the top of the element to the top of the line
text-top align the top of the element to the top of the parent element font
middle align the middle of the element to the middle of the line of the parent
bottom align the bottom of the element to the bottom of the line
text-bottom align the bottom of the element to the bottom of the parent element font
line-height
This allows you to change the height of a line. Each line of text has a certain font height, but
then there is additional spacing vertically between the lines. That's the line height:
p {
line-height: 0.9rem;
}
text-indent
Indent the first line of a paragraph by a set length, or a percentage of the paragraph width:
63
Typography
p {
text-indent: -10px;
}
text-align-last
By default the last line of a paragraph is aligned following the text-align value. Use this
property to change that behavior:
p {
text-align-last: right;
}
word-spacing
You can use the normal keyword, to reset inherited values, or use a length value:
p {
word-spacing: 2px;
}
span {
word-spacing: -0.2em;
}
letter-spacing
You can use the normal keyword, to reset inherited values, or use a length value:
p {
letter-spacing: 0.2px;
}
span {
letter-spacing: -0.2em;
}
text-shadow
64
Typography
Apply a shadow to the text. By default the text has now shadow.
This property accepts an optional color, and a set of values that set
If the color is not specified, the shadow will use the text color.
Examples:
p {
text-shadow: 0.2px 2px;
}
span {
text-shadow: yellow 0.2px 2px 3px;
}
white-space
Sets how CSS handles the white space, new lines and tabs inside an element.
normal collapses white space. Adds new lines when necessary as the text reaches the
container end
nowrap collapses white space. Does not add a new line when the text reaches the end of
the container, and suppresses any line break added to the text
pre-line collapses white space. Adds new lines when necessary as the text reaches the
container end
pre preserves white space. Does not add a new line when the text reaches the end of
container end
tab-size
Sets the width of the tab character. By default it's 8, and you can set an integer value that sets
the character spaces it takes, or a length value:
65
Typography
p {
tab-size: 2;
}
span {
tab-size: 4px;
}
writing-mode
Defines whether lines of text are laid out horizontally or vertically, and the direction in which
blocks progress.
horizontal-tb (default)
vertical-rl content is laid out vertically. New lines are put on the left of the previous
vertical-lr content is laid out vertically. New lines are put on the right of the previous
hyphens
none (default)
manual only add an hyphen when there is already a visible hyphen or a hidden hyphen (a
special character)
auto add hyphens when determined the text can have a hyphen.
text-orientation
mixed is the default, and if a language is vertical (like Japanese) it preserves that
direction
66
Typography
Sets the direction of the text. Valid values are ltr and rtl :
p {
direction: rtl;
}
word-break
normal (default) means the text is only broken between words, not inside a word
break-all the browser can break a word (but no hyphens are added)
keep-all suppress soft wrapping. Mostly used for CJK (Chinese/Japanese/Korean) text.
Speaking of CJK text, the property line-break is used to determine how text lines break. I'm
not an expert with those languages, so I will avoid covering it.
overflow-wrap
If a word is too long to fit a line, it can overflow outside of the container.
This property is also known as word-wrap , although that is non-standard (but still works
as an alias)
We can use:
p {
overflow-wrap: break-word;
}
p {
overflow-wrap: anywhere;
}
if the browser sees there's a soft wrap opportunity somewhere earlier. No hyphens are added,
in any case.
This property is very similar to word-break . We might want to choose this one on western
languages, while word-break has special treatment for non-western languages.
67
Typography
68
Box Model
Box Model
Every CSS element is essentially a box. Every element is a generic box.
The box model explains the sizing of the elements based on a few CSS properties.
The best way to visualize the box model is to open the browser DevTools and check how it is
displayed:
Here you can see how Firefox tells me the properties of a span element I highlighted. I right-
clicked on it, pressed Inspect Element, and went to the Layout panel of the DevTools.
See, the light blue space is the content area. Surrounding it there is the padding, then the
border and finally the margin.
By default, if you set a width (or height) on the element, that is going to be applied to the
content area. All the padding, border, and margin calculations are done outside of the value,
so you have to take this in mind when you do your calculation.
69
Box Model
70
Border
Border
The border is a thin layer between padding and margin. Editing the border you can make
elements draw their perimeter on screen.
border-style
border-color
border-width
The property border can be used as a shorthand for all those properties.
You also have the ability to use images as borders, an ability given to you by border-image
and its specific separate properties:
border-image-source
border-image-slice
border-image-width
border-image-outset
border-image-repeat
dotted
dashed
solid
double
groove
ridge
inset
outset
none
hidden
71
Border
The default for the style is none , so to make the border appear at all you need to change it to
something else. solid is a good choice most of the times.
You can set a different style for each edge using the properties
border-top-style
border-right-style
border-bottom-style
border-left-style
or you can use border-style with multiple values to define them, using the usual Top-Right-
Bottom-Left order:
p {
border-style: solid dotted solid dotted;
}
72
Border
thin
thick
Example:
p {
border-width: 2px;
}
You can set the width of each edge (Top-Right-Bottom-Left) separately by using 4 values:
p {
border-width: 2px 1px 2px 1px;
}
or you can use the specific edge properties border-top-width , border-right-width , border-
bottom-width , border-left-width .
If you don't set a color, the border by default is colored using the color of the text in the
element.
Example:
p {
border-color: yellow;
}
You can set the color of each edge (Top-Right-Bottom-Left) separately by using 4 values:
p {
border-color: black red yellow blue;
}
73
Border
or you can use the specific edge properties border-top-color , border-right-color , border-
bottom-color , border-left-color .
Example:
p {
border: 2px black solid;
}
You can also use the edge-specific properties border-top , border-right , border-bottom ,
border-left .
Example:
p {
border-left: 2px black solid;
border-right: 3px red dashed;
}
be used as the radius of the circle that will be used to round the border.
Usage:
p {
border-radius: 3px;
}
74
Border
One very cool thing with borders is the ability to use images to style them. This lets you go
very creative with borders.
We have 5 properties:
border-image-source
border-image-slice
border-image-width
border-image-outset
border-image-repeat
and the shorthand border-image . I won't go in much details here as images as borders would
need a more in-depth coverage as the one I can do in this little chapter. I recommend reading
the CSS Tricks almanac entry on border-image for more information.
75
Padding
Padding
The padding CSS property is commonly used in CSS to add space in the inner side of an
element.
Remember:
padding-top
padding-right
padding-bottom
padding-left
The usage of those is very simple and cannot be confused, for example:
padding-left: 30px;
padding-right: 3em;
1 value
Using a single value applies that to all the paddings: top, right, bottom, left.
padding: 20px;
2 values
Using 2 values applies the first to bottom & top, and the second to left & right.
76
Padding
3 values
Using 3 values applies the first to top, the second to left & right, the third to bottom.
4 values
Using 4 values applies the first to top, the second to right, the third to bottom, the fourth to
left.
Values accepted
padding accepts values expressed in any kind of length unit, the most common ones are px,
77
Margin
Margin
The margin CSS property is commonly used in CSS to add space around an element.
Remember:
margin-top
margin-right
margin-bottom
margin-left
The usage of those is very simple and cannot be confused, for example:
margin-left: 30px;
margin-right: 3em;
1 value
Using a single value applies that to all the margins: top, right, bottom, left.
margin: 20px;
2 values
Using 2 values applies the first to bottom & top, and the second to left & right.
78
Margin
3 values
Using 3 values applies the first to top, the second to left & right, the third to bottom.
4 values
Using 4 values applies the first to top, the second to right, the third to bottom, the fourth to
left.
Values accepted
margin accepts values expressed in any kind of length unit, the most common ones are px,
margin: 0 auto;
As said above, using 2 values applies the first to bottom & top, and the second to left &
right.
The modern way to center elements is to use Flexbox, and its justify-content: center;
directive.
Older browsers of course do not implement Flexbox, and if you need to support them margin:
0 auto; is still a good choice.
79
Margin
margin is the only property related to sizing that can have a negative value. It's extremely
useful, too. Setting a negative top margin makes an element move over elements before it,
and given enough negative value it will move out of the page.
A negative right margin makes the content of the element expand beyond its allowed content
size.
A negative left margin moves the element left over the elements that precede it, and given
enough negative value it will move out of the page.
80
Box Sizing
Box Sizing
The default behavior of browsers when calculating the width of an element is to apply the
calculated width and height to the content area, without taking any of the padding, border and
margin in consideration.
border-box
content-box
content-box is the default, the one we had for ages before box-sizing became a thing.
border-box is the new and great thing we are looking for. If you set that on an element:
.my-div {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
width and height calculation include the padding and the border. Only the margin is left out,
which is reasonable since in our mind we also typically see that as a separate thing: margin is
outside of the box.
This property is a small change but has a big impact. CSS Tricks even declared an
international box-sizing awareness day, just saying, and it's recommended to apply it to every
element on the page, out of the box, with this:
*, *:before, *:after {
box-sizing: border-box;
}
81
Display
Display
The display property of an object determines how it is rendered by the browser.
It's a very important property, and probably the one with the highest number of values you can
use.
block
inline
none
contents
flow
flow-root
flex
grid
list-item
inline-block
inline-table
inline-flex
inline-grid
inline-list-item
Choosing any of those will considerably alter the behavior of the browser with the element and
its children.
In this section we'll analyze the most important ones not covered elsewhere:
block
inline
inline-block
none
We'll see some of the others in later chapters, including coverage of table , flex and grid .
inline
82
Display
All the HTML tags are displayed inline out of the box except some elements like div , p and
section , which are set as block by the user agent (the browser).
You can add them, but the appearance in the page won't change - they are calculated and
applied automatically by the browser.
inline-block
Similar to inline , but with inline-block width and height are applied as you specified.
block
As mentioned, normally elements are displayed inline, with the exception of some elements,
including
div
section
ul
With display: block , elements are stacked one after each other, vertically, and every element
takes up 100% of the page.
The values assigned to the width and height properties are respected, if you set them,
along with margin and padding .
none
Using display: none makes an element disappear. It's still there in the HTML, but just not
visible in the browser.
83
Positioning
Positioning
Positioning is what makes us determine where elements appear on the screen, and how they
appear.
You can move elements around, and position them exactly where you want.
In this section we'll also see how things change on a page based on how elements with
different position interact with each other.
static
relative
absolute
fixed
sticky
Static positioning
This is the default value for an element. Static positioned elements are displayed in the normal
page flow.
Relative positioning
If you set position: relative on an element, you are now able to position it with an offset,
using the properties
top
right
bottom
left
which are called offset properties. They accept a length value or a percentage.
Take this example I made on Codepen. I create a parent container, a child container, and an
inner box with some text:
<div class="parent">
<div class="child">
84
Positioning
<div class="box">
<p>Test</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
with some CSS to give some colors and padding, but does not affect positioning:
.parent {
background-color: #af47ff;
padding: 30px;
width: 300px;
}
.child {
background-color: #ff4797;
padding: 30px;
}
.box {
background-color: #f3ff47;
padding: 30px;
border: 2px solid #333;
border-style: dotted;
font-family: courier;
text-align: center;
font-size: 2rem;
}
You can try and add any of the properties I mentioned before ( top , right , bottom , left )
to .box , and nothing will happen. The position is static .
85
Positioning
Now if we set position: relative to the box, at first apparently nothing changes. But the
element is now able to move using the top , right , bottom , left properties, and now you
can alter the position of it relatively to the element containing it.
For example:
.box {
/* ... */
position: relative;
top: -60px;
}
A negative value for top will make the box move up relatively to its container.
Or
.box {
/* ... */
position: relative;
top: -60px;
left: 180px;
}
86
Positioning
Notice how the space that is occupied by the box remains preserved in the container, like it
was still in its place.
Another property that will now work is z-index to alter the z-axis placement. We'll talk about it
later on.
Absolute positioning
Setting position: absolute on an element will remove it from the document's flow, and it will
not longer .
Remember in relative positioning that we noticed the space originally occupied by an element
was preserved even if it was moved around?
With absolute positioning, as soon as we set position: absolute on .box , its original space
is now collapsed, and only the origin (x, y coordinates) remain the same.
.box {
/* ... */
position: absolute;
}
87
Positioning
We can now move the box around as we please, using the top , right , bottom , left
properties:
.box {
/* ... */
position: absolute;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
}
or
.box {
/* ... */
position: absolute;
top: 140px;
left: 50px;
}
88
Positioning
The coordinates are relative to the closest container that is not static .
This means that if we add position: relative to the .child element, and we set top and
left to 0, the box will not be positioned at the top left margin of the window, but rather it will
.child {
/* ... */
position: relative;
}
.box {
/* ... */
position: absolute;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
}
89
Positioning
.child {
/* ... */
position: static;
}
.box {
/* ... */
position: absolute;
top: 0px;
left: 0px;
}
Like for relative positioning, you can use z-index to alter the z-axis placement.
Fixed positioning
Like with absolute positioning, when an element is assigned position: fixed it's removed
from the flow of the page.
The difference with absolute positioning is this: elements are now always positioned relative to
the window, instead of the first non-static container.
.box {
/* ... */
position: fixed;
}
90
Positioning
.box {
/* ... */
position: fixed;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}
Another big difference is that elements are not affected by scrolling. Once you put a sticky
element somewhere, scrolling the page does not remove it from the visible part of the page.
Sticky positioning
While the above values have been around for a very long time, this one was introduced
recently and it's still relatively unsupported (see caniuse.com)
The UITableView iOS component is the thing that comes to mind when I think about position:
sticky . You know when you scroll in the contacts list and the first letter is sticked to the top, to
let you know you are viewing that particular letter's contacts?
We used JavaScript to emulate that, but this is the approach taken by CSS to allow it natively.
91
Positioning
92
Floating and clearing
It was used in lots of hacks and creative usages because it was one of the few ways, along
with tables, we could really implement some layouts. In the past we used to float the sidebar to
the left, for example, to show it on the left side of the screen and added some margin to the
main content.
Luckily times have changed and today we have Flexbox and Grid to help us with layout, and
float has gone back to its original scope: placing content on one side of the container element,
and make its siblings show up around it.
left
right
Say we have a box which contains a paragraph with some text, and the paragraph also
contains an image.
<div class="parent">
<div class="child">
<div class="box">
<p>This is some random paragraph and an image. <img src="https://via.placeholder.com
/100x100" /> The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the tex
t. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the text. The ima
ge is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in t
he middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle
of the text.
</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
.parent {
background-color: #af47ff;
padding: 30px;
width: 500px;
}
.child {
background-color: #ff4797;
padding: 30px;
}
93
Floating and clearing
.box {
background-color: #f3ff47;
padding: 30px;
border: 2px solid #333;
border-style: dotted;
font-family: courier;
text-align: justify;
font-size: 1rem;
}
As you can see, the normal flow by default considers the image inline, and makes space for it
in the line itself.
img {
float: left;
padding: 20px 20px 0px 0px;
}
94
Floating and clearing
and this is what we get by applying a float: right, adjusting the padding accordingly:
img {
float: right;
padding: 20px 0px 20px 20px;
}
95
Floating and clearing
A floated element is removed from the normal flow of the page, and the other content flows
around it.
You are not limited to floating images, too. Here we switch the image with a span element:
<div class="parent">
<div class="child">
<div class="box">
<p>This is some random paragraph and an image. <span>Some text to float</span> The i
mage is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in
the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middl
e of the text. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the t
ext. The image is in the middle of the text. The image is in the middle of the text.
</p>
</div>
</div>
</div>
span {
float: right;
margin: 20px 0px 20px 20px;
padding: 10px;
border: 1px solid black
96
Floating and clearing
Clearing
What happens when you float more than one element?
If when floated they find another floated image, by default they are stacked up one next to the
other, horizontally. Until there is no room, and they will start being stacked on a new line.
97
Floating and clearing
img {
float: left;
padding: 20px 20px 0px 0px;
}
98
Floating and clearing
if you add clear: left to images, those are going to be stacked vertically rather than
horizontally:
99
Floating and clearing
100
z-index
z-index
When we talked about positioning, I mentioned that you can use the z-index property to
control the Z axis positioning of elements.
It's very useful when you have multiple elements that overlap each other, and you need to
decide which one is visible, as nearer to the user, and which one(s) should be hidden behind
it.
This property takes a number (without decimals) and uses that number to calculate which
elements appear nearer to the user, in the Z axis.
The higher the z-index value, the more an element is positioned nearer to the user.
When deciding which element should be visible and which one should be positioned behind it,
the browser does a calculation on the z-index value.
The default value is auto , a special keyword. Using auto , the Z axis order is determined by
the position of the HTML element in the page - the last sibling appears first, as it's defined last.
By default elements have the static value for the position property. In this case, the z-
index property does not make any difference - it must be set to absolute , relative or
fixed to work.
Example:
.my-first-div {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
width: 600px;
height: 600px;
z-index: 10;
}
.my-second-div {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
width: 500px;
height: 500px;
z-index: 20;
}
The element with class .my-second-div will be displayed, and behind it .my-first-div .
101
z-index
Here we used 10 and 20, but you can use any number. Negative numbers too. It's common to
pick non-consecutive numbers, so you can position elements in the middle. If you use
consecutive numbers instead, you would need to re-calculate the z-index of each element
involved in the positioning.
102
CSS Grid
CSS Grid
CSS Grid is the new kid in the CSS town, and while not yet fully supported by all browsers, it's
going to be the future system for layouts.
CSS Grid is not a competitor to Flexbox. They interoperate and collaborate on complex
layouts, because CSS Grid works on 2 dimensions (rows AND columns) while Flexbox works
on a single dimension (rows OR columns).
Building layouts for the web has traditionally been a complicated topic.
I won't dig into the reasons for this complexity, which is a complex topic on its own, but you
can think yourself as a very lucky human because nowadays you have 2 very powerful and
well supported tools at your disposal:
CSS Flexbox
CSS Grid
These 2 are the tools to build the Web layouts of the future.
Unless you need to support old browsers like IE8 and IE9, there is no reason to be messing
with things like:
Table layouts
Floats
clearfix hacks
display: table hacks
In this guide there's all you need to know about going from a zero knowledge of CSS Grid to
being a proficient user.
The basics
The CSS Grid layout is activated on a container element (which can be a div or any other
tag) by setting display: grid .
103
CSS Grid
As with flexbox, you can define some properties on the container, and some properties on
each individual item in the grid.
These properties combined will determine the final look of the grid.
The following snippet defines a grid with 4 columns each 200px wide, and 2 rows with a 300px
height each.
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 300px 300px;
}
104
CSS Grid
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 100px 100px;
}
105
CSS Grid
Automatic dimensions
Many times you might have a fixed header size, a fixed footer size, and the main content that
is flexible in height, depending on its length. In this case you can use the auto keyword:
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-rows: 100px auto 100px;
}
You can specify any value for each row/column, to create a lot of different designs:
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 100px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 100px 50px;
}
106
CSS Grid
Another example:
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 10px 100px;
grid-template-rows: 100px 10px;
}
107
CSS Grid
grid-column-gap
grid-row-gap
Example:
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 100px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 100px 50px;
108
CSS Grid
grid-column-gap: 25px;
grid-row-gap: 25px;
}
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 100px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 100px 50px;
grid-gap: 25px;
}
grid-column-start
grid-column-end
grid-row-start
grid-row-end
109
CSS Grid
Example:
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 300px 300px;
}
.item1 {
grid-column-start: 2;
grid-column-end: 4;
}
.item6 {
grid-column-start: 3;
grid-column-end: 5;
}
The numbers correspond to the vertical line that separates each column, starting from 1:
110
CSS Grid
The same principle applies to grid-row-start and grid-row-end , except this time instead of
taking more columns, a cell takes more rows.
Shorthand syntax
Those properties have a shorthand syntax provided by:
grid-column
grid-row
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 300px 300px;
}
.item1 {
111
CSS Grid
grid-column: 2 / 4;
}
.item6 {
grid-column: 3 / 5;
}
Another approach is to set the starting column/row, and set how many it should occupy using
span :
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 300px 300px;
}
.item1 {
grid-column: 2 / span 2;
}
.item6 {
grid-column: 3 / span 2;
}
The following example divides a grid into 3 columns with the same width, 1/3 of the available
space each.
.container {
grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr;
}
.container {
grid-template-columns: 3rem 15% 1fr 2fr
}
Using repeat()
112
CSS Grid
repeat() is a special function that takes a number that indicates the number of times a
If every column has the same width you can specify the layout using this syntax:
.container {
grid-template-columns: repeat(4, 100px);
}
Or using fractions:
.container {
grid-template-columns: repeat(4, 1fr);
}
Here's an example where the sidebar takes 1/4 of the screen and never takes less than
200px:
.container {
grid-template-columns: minmax(200px, 3fr) 9fr;
}
You can also set just a maximum value using the auto keyword:
.container {
grid-template-columns: minmax(auto, 50%) 9fr;
}
.container {
grid-template-columns: minmax(100px, auto) 9fr;
}
113
CSS Grid
Using grid-template-areas You can define template areas to move them around in the grid,
and also to spawn an item on multiple rows / columns instead of using grid-column .
Here's an example:
<div class="container">
<main>
...
</main>
<aside>
...
</aside>
<header>
...
</header>
<footer>
...
</footer>
</div>
.container {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 300px 300px;
grid-template-areas:
"header header header header"
"sidebar main main main"
"footer footer footer footer";
}
main {
grid-area: main;
}
aside {
grid-area: sidebar;
}
header {
grid-area: header;
}
footer {
grid-area: footer;
}
Despite their original order, items are placed where grid-template-areas define, depending on
the grid-area property associated to them.
.container {
114
CSS Grid
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 200px 200px 200px 200px;
grid-template-rows: 300px 300px;
grid-template-areas:
". header header ."
"sidebar . main main"
". footer footer .";
}
.container {
display: grid;
height: 100vh;
grid-template-columns: 1fr 1fr 1fr 1fr;
grid-template-rows: 1fr 1fr;
}
<div class="wrapper">
<header>Header</header>
<article>
<h1>Welcome</h1>
<p>Hi!</p>
</article>
115
CSS Grid
<aside><ul><li>Sidebar</li></ul></aside>
<footer>Footer</footer>
</div>
header {
grid-area: header;
background-color: #fed330;
padding: 20px;
}
article {
grid-area: content;
background-color: #20bf6b;
padding: 20px;
}
aside {
grid-area: sidebar;
background-color: #45aaf2;
}
footer {
padding: 20px;
grid-area: footer;
background-color: #fd9644;
}
.wrapper {
display: grid;
grid-gap: 20px;
grid-template-columns: 1fr 3fr;
grid-template-areas:
"header header"
"sidebar content"
"footer footer";
}
I added some colors to make it prettier, but basically it assigns to every different tag a grid-
area name, which is used in the grid-template-areas property in .wrapper .
When the layout is smaller we can put the sidebar below the content using a media query:
See on CodePen
116
CSS Grid
Wrapping up
These are the basics of CSS Grid. There are many things I didn't include in this introduction
but I wanted to make it very simple, to start using this new layout system without making it feel
overwhelming.
117
Flexbox
Flexbox
Flexbox, also called Flexible Box Module, is one of the two modern layouts systems, along
with CSS Grid.
The main goal of flexbox is to allow items to fill the whole space offered by their container,
depending on some rules you set.
Unless you need to support old browsers like IE8 and IE9, Flexbox is the tool that lets you
forget about using
Table layouts
Floats
clearfix hacks
display: table hacks
Let's dive into flexbox and become a master of it in a very short time.
Browser support
At the time of writing (Feb 2018), it's supported by 97.66% of the users, all the most important
browsers implement it since years, so even older browsers (including IE10+) are covered:
118
Flexbox
While we must wait a few years for users to catch up on CSS Grid, Flexbox is an older
technology and can be used right now.
Enable Flexbox
A flexbox layout is applied to a container, by setting
display: flex;
or
display: inline-flex;
Container properties
119
Flexbox
Some flexbox properties apply to the container, which sets the general rules for its items. They
are
flex-direction
justify-content
align-items
flex-wrap
flex-flow
flex-direction: row places items as a row, in the text direction (left-to-right for western
countries)
flex-direction: row-reverse places items just like row but in the opposite direction
flex-direction: column-reverse places items in a column, just like column but in the
opposite direction -
120
Flexbox
You can change this behavior using justify-content to change the horizontal alignment, and
align-items to change the vertical alignment.
121
Flexbox
122
Flexbox
123
Flexbox
124
Flexbox
A note on baseline
baseline looks similar to flex-start in this example, due to my boxes being too simple.
Check out this Codepen to have a more useful example, which I forked from a Pen originally
created by Martin Michálek. As you can see there, items dimensions are aligned.
Wrap
By default items in a flexbox container are kept on a single line, shrinking them to fit in the
container.
To force the items to spread across multiple lines, use flex-wrap: wrap . This will distribute the
items according to the order set in flex-direction . Use flex-wrap: wrap-reverse to reverse
this order.
A shorthand property called flex-flow allows you to specify flex-direction and flex-wrap
in a single line, by adding the flex-direction value first, followed by flex-wrap value, for
example: flex-flow: row wrap .
Single items can have a certain amount of independence and flexibility, and you can alter their
appearance using those properties:
order
align-self
flex-grow
flex-shrink
flex-basis
flex
125
Flexbox
You can override this property using order on each separate item. This is a property you set
on the item, not the container. You can make an item appear before all the others by setting a
negative value.
126
Flexbox
If all items are defined as 1 and one is defined as 2, the bigger element will take the space of
two "1" items.
flex-shrink
If all items are defined as 1 and one is defined as 3, the bigger element will shrink 3x the other
ones. When less space is available, it will take 3x less space.
flex-basis
If set to auto , it sizes an item according to its width or height, and adds extra space based on
the flex-grow property.
If set to 0, it does not add any extra space for the item when calculating the layout.
If you specify a pixel number value, it will use that as the length value (width or height depends
if it's a row or a column item)
flex
127
Flexbox
flex-grow
flex-shrink
flex-basis
128
Tables
Tables
Tables in the past were greatly overused in CSS, as they were one of the only ways we could
create a fancy page layout.
Today with Grid and Flexbox we can move tables back to the job they were intended to do:
styling tables.
<table>
<thead>
<tr>
<th scope="col">Name</th>
<th scope="col">Age</th>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<th scope="row">Flavio</th>
<td>36</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<th scope="row">Roger</th>
<td>7</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
By default it's not very attractive. The browser provides some standard styles, and that's it:
We can use CSS to style all the elements of the table, of course.
Let's start with the border. A nice border can go a long way.
129
Tables
We can apply it on the table element, and on the inner elements too, like th and td :
table, th, td {
border: 1px solid #333;
}
One common thing with tables is the ability to add a color to one row, and a different color to
another row. This is possible using the :nth-child(odd) or :nth-child(even) selector:
tbody tr:nth-child(odd) {
background-color: #af47ff;
}
130
Tables
If you add border-collapse: collapse; to the table element, all borders are collapsed into one:
131
Tables
132
Centering
Centering
Centering things in CSS is a task that is very different if you need to center horizontally or
vertically.
In this post I explain the most common scenarios and how to solve them. If a new solution is
provided by Flexbox I ignore the old techniques because we need to move forward, and
Flexbox is supported by browsers since years, IE10 included.
Center horizontally
Text
Text is very simple to center horizontally using the text-align property set to center :
p {
text-align: center;
}
Blocks
The modern way to center anything that is not text is to use Flexbox:
#mysection {
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
}
133
Centering
Anything that is not text can be centered by applying an automatic margin to left and right, and
setting the width of the element:
section {
margin: 0 auto;
width: 50%;
}
section {
margin-top: 0;
margin-bottom: 0;
margin-left: auto;
margin-right: auto;
}
Center vertically
Traditionally this has always been a difficult task. Flexbox now provides us a great way to do
this in the simplest possible way:
#mysection {
display: flex;
align-items: center;
}
134
Centering
#mysection {
display: flex;
align-items: center;
justify-content: center;
}
body {
display: grid;
135
Centering
place-items: center;
height: 100vh;
}
136
Lists
Lists
Lists are a very important part of many web pages.
li {
list-style-type: square;
}
We have lots of possible values, which you can see here https://developer.mozilla.org/en-
US/docs/Web/CSS/list-style-type with examples of their appearance. Some of the most
popular ones are disc , circle , square and none .
appropriate:
li {
list-style-image: url(list-image.png);
}
list-style-position lets you add the marker outside (the default) or inside of the list
li {
list-style-position: inside;
}
The list-style shorthand property lets us specify all those properties in the same line:
li {
list-style: url(list-image.png) inside;
}
137
Media queries and responsive design
Media types
Used in media queries and @import declarations, media types allow us to determine on which
media a CSS file, or a piece of CSS, is loaded.
In the past we had more of them, but most are deprecated as they proven to not be an
effective way of determining device needs.
We can load a CSS file on multiple media types separating each with a comma:
We're not limited to just using media types in the media attribute and in the @import
declaration. There's more
138
Media queries and responsive design
First, let's introduce media feature descriptors. They are additional keywords that we can
add to the media attribute of link or the the @import declaration, to express more
conditionals over the loading of the CSS.
width
height
device-width
device-height
aspect-ratio
device-aspect-ratio
color
color-index
monochrome
resolution
orientation
scan
grid
min-width , max-width
min-device-width , max-device-width
and so on.
Some of those accept a length value which can be expressed in px or rem or any length
value. It's the case of width , height , device-width , device-height .
For example:
Notice that we wrap each block using media feature descriptors in parentheses.
Some accept a fixed value. orientation , used to detect the device orientation, accepts
portrait or landscape .
Example:
139
Media queries and responsive design
scan , used to determine the type of screen, accepts progressive (for modern displays) or
Like color which inspects the number of bits per color component used by the device. Very
low-level, but you just need to know it's there for your usage (like grid , color-index ,
monochrome ).
aspect-ratio and device-aspect-ratio accept a ratio value representing the width to height
Example:
resolution represents the pixel density of the device, expressed in a resolution data type like
dpi .
Example:
Logic operators
We can combine rules using and :
We can perform an "or" type of logic operation using commas, which combines multiple media
queries:
Important: not can only be used to negate an entire media query, so it must be placed
at the beginning of it (or after a comma)
140
Media queries and responsive design
Media queries
All those above rules we saw applied to @import or the the link HTML tag can be applied
inside the CSS, too.
Example:
Media queries can be quite complex. This example applies the CSS only if it's a screen
device, the width is between 600 and 800 pixels, and the orientation is landscape:
@media screen and (max-width: 800px) and (min-width: 600px) and (orientation: landscape) {
/* enter some CSS */
}
141
Feature Queries
Feature Queries
Feature queries are a recent and relatively unknown ability of CSS, but a well supported one.
We can use it to check if a feature is supported by the browser using the @supports keyword.
For example I think this is especially useful, at the time of writing, for checking if a browser
supports CSS grid, for example, which can be done using:
We check if the browser supports the grid value for the display property.
We can use @supports for any CSS property, to check any value.
We can also use the logical operators and , or and not to build complex feature queries:
142
Filters
Filters
Filters allow us to perform operations on elements.
Things you normally do with Photoshop or other photo editing software, like changing the
opacity or the brightness, and more.
You use the filter property. Here's an example of it applied on an image, but this property
can be used on any element:
img {
filter: <something>;
}
blur()
brightness()
contrast()
drop-shadow()
grayscale()
hue-rotate()
invert()
opacity()
sepia()
saturate()
url()
Notice the parentheses after each option, because they all require a parameter.
For example:
img {
filter: opacity(0.5);
}
means the image will be 50% transparent, because opacity() takes one value from 0 to 1, or
a percentage.
img {
filter: opacity(0.5) blur(2px);
}
143
Filters
blur()
Blurs an element content. You pass it a value, expressed in px or em or rem that will be
used to determine the blur radius.
Example:
img {
filter: blur(4px);
}
opacity()
opacity() takes one value from 0 to 1, or a percentage, and determines the image
Example:
img {
filter: opacity(0.5);
}
CSS also has an opacity property. filter however can be hardware accelerated,
depending on the implementation, so this should be the preferred method.
drop-shadow()
drop-shadow() shows a shadow behind the element, which follows the alpha channel. This
means that if you have a transparent image, you get a shadow applied to the image shape, not
the image box. If the image does not have an alpha channel, the shadow will be applied to the
entire image box.
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Filters
You can set the color without setting the spread radius or blur radius. CSS understands the
value is a color and not a length value.
Example:
img {
filter: drop-shadow(10px 10px 5px orange);
}
img {
filter: drop-shadow(10px 10px orange);
}
img {
filter: drop-shadow(10px 10px 5px 5px #333);
}
grayscale()
Make the element have a gray color.
You pass one value from 0 to 1, or from 0% to 100%, where 1 and 100% mean completely
gray, and 0 or 0% mean the image is not touched, and the original colors remain.
Example:
img {
filter: grayscale(50%);
}
sepia()
Make the element have a sepia color.
You pass one value from 0 to 1, or from 0% to 100%, where 1 and 100% mean completely
sepia, and 0 or 0% mean the image is not touched, and the original colors remain.
Example:
img {
filter: sepia(50%);
}
invert()
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Filters
Invert the colors of an element. Inverting a color means looking up the opposite of a color in
the HSL color wheel. Just search "color wheel" in Google if you have no idea what does that
means. For example, the opposite of yellow is blue, the opposite of red is cyan. Every single
color has an opposite.
You pass a number, from 0 to 1 or from 0% to 100%, that determines the amount of inversion.
1 or 100% means full inversion, 0 or 0% means no inversion.
0.5 or 50% will always render a 50% gray color, because you always end up in the middle of
the wheel.
Example:
img {
filter: invert(50%);
}
hue-rotate()
The HSL color wheel is represented in degrees. Using hue-rotate() you can rotate the color
using a positive or negative rotation.
Example:
img {
filter: hue-rotate(90deg);
}
brightness()
Alters the brightness of an element.
Values higher than 1 or 100% make the image brighter up to reaching a total white element.
Example:
img {
filter: brightness(50%);
}
contrast()
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Filters
Example:
img {
filter: contrast(150%);
}
saturate()
Alters the saturation of an element.
0 or 0% gives a total grayscale element (with less saturation). 1 or 100% gives an unchanged
image
Example:
img {
filter: saturate();
}
url()
This filter allows to apply a filter defined in an SVG file. You point to the SVG file location.
Example:
img {
filter: url(filter.svg);
}
SVG filters are out of the scope of this book, but you can read more on this Smashing
Magazine post: https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2015/05/why-the-svg-filter-is-awesome/
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Transforms
Transforms
Transforms allow you to translate, rotate, scale, and skew elements, in the 2D or 3D space.
They are a very cool CSS feature, especially when combined with animations.
2D transforms
The transform property accepts those functions:
matrix() a way to perform any of the above operations using a matrix of 6 elements, a
Here is an example of a transform which changes the .box element width by 2 (duplicating it)
and the height by 0.5 (reducing it to half):
.box {
transform: scale(2, 0.5);
}
transform-origin lets us set the origin (the (0, 0) coordinates) for the transformation, letting
For example:
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Transforms
3D transforms
We can go one step further and move our elements in a 3D space instead than on a 2D
space. With 3D, we are adding another axis, Z, which adds depth to out visuals.
Using the perspective property you can specify how far the 3D object is from the viewer.
Example:
.3Delement {
perspective: 100px;
}
perspective-origin determines the appearance of the position of the viewer, how are we
Now we can use additional functions that control the Z axis, that adds up to the other X and Y
axis transforms:
translateZ()
rotateZ()
scaleZ()
3D transforms are a bit too advanced for this handbook, but a great topic to explore on your
own.
149
Transitions
Transitions
CSS Transitions are the most simple way to create an animation in CSS.
In a transition, you change the value of a property, and you tell CSS to slowly change it
according to some parameters, towards a final state.
Property Description
transition-
property the CSS property that should transition
transition-
duration the duration of the transition
transition-timing- the timing function used by the animation (common values: linear,
function ease). Default: ease
transition-delay optional number of seconds to wait before starting the animation
.container {
transition: property
duration
timing-function
delay;
}
.one,
.three {
background: rgba(142, 92, 205, .75);
transition: background 1s ease-in;
}
.two,
.four {
background: rgba(236, 252, 100, .75);
}
.circle:hover {
background: rgba(142, 92, 205, .25); /* lighter */
}
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Transitions
When hovering the .one and .three elements, the purple circles, there is a transition
animation that ease the change of background, while the yellow circles do not, because they
do not have the transition property defined.
linear
ease
ease-in
ease-out
ease-in-out
You can create a completely custom timing function using cubic bezier curves. This is rather
advanced, but basically any of those functions above is built using bezier curves. We have
handy names as they are common ones.
This is Chrome:
151
Transitions
This is Firefox:
152
Transitions
From those panels you can live edit the transition and experiment in the page directly without
reloading your code.
background
background-color
background-position
background-size
border
border-color
border-width
border-bottom
border-bottom-color
border-bottom-left-radius
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Transitions
border-bottom-right-radius
border-bottom-width
border-left
border-left-color
border-left-width
border-radius
border-right
border-right-color
border-right-width
border-spacing
border-top
border-top-color
border-top-left-radius
border-top-right-radius
border-top-width
bottom
box-shadow
caret-color
clip
color
column-count
column-gap
column-rule
column-rule-color
column-rule-width
column-width
columns
content
filter
flex
flex-basis
flex-grow
flex-shrink
font
font-size
font-size-adjust
font-stretch
font-weight
grid-area
grid-auto-columns
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Transitions
grid-auto-flow
grid-auto-rows
grid-column-end
grid-column-gap
grid-column-start
grid-column
grid-gap
grid-row-end
grid-row-gap
grid-row-start
grid-row
grid-template-areas
grid-template-columns
grid-template-rows
grid-template
grid
height
left
letter-spacing
line-height
margin
margin-bottom
margin-left
margin-right
margin-top
max-height
max-width
min-height
min-width
opacity
order
outline
outline-color
outline-offset
outline-width
padding
padding-bottom
padding-left
padding-right
padding-top
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Transitions
perspective
perspective-origin
quotes
right
tab-size
text-decoration
text-decoration-color
text-indent
text-shadow
top
transform.
vertical-align
visibility
width
word-spacing
z-index
156
Animations
Animations
CSS Animations are a great way to create visual animations, not limited to a single movement
like CSS Transitions, but much more articulated.
.container {
animation: spin 10s linear infinite;
}
spin is the name of the animation, which we need to define separately. We also tell CSS to
make the animation last 10 seconds, perform it in a linear way (no acceleration or any
difference in its speed) and to repeat it infinitely.
You must define how your animation works using keyframes. Example of an animation that
rotates an item:
@keyframes spin {
0% {
transform: rotateZ(0);
}
100% {
transform: rotateZ(360deg);
}
}
Inside the @keyframes definition you can have as many intermediate waypoints as you want.
In this case we instruct CSS to make the transform property to rotate the Z axis from 0 to 360
grades, completing the full loop.
Notice how this does not dictate anything about the temporal interval the animation should
take. This is defined when you use it via animation .
<div class="container">
<div class="circle one"></div>
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Animations
body {
display: grid;
place-items: center;
height: 100vh;
}
.circle {
border-radius: 50%;
left: calc(50% - 6.25em);
top: calc(50% - 12.5em);
transform-origin: 50% 12.5em;
width: 12.5em;
height: 12.5em;
position: absolute;
box-shadow: 0 1em 2em rgba(0, 0, 0, .5);
}
.one,
.three {
background: rgba(142, 92, 205, .75);
}
.two,
.four {
background: rgba(236, 252, 100, .75);
}
.one {
transform: rotateZ(0);
}
.two {
transform: rotateZ(90deg);
}
.three {
transform: rotateZ(180deg);
}
.four {
transform: rotateZ(-90deg);
}
Let's make this structure (all the circles together) rotate. To do this, we apply an animation on
the container, and we define that animation as a 360 degrees rotation:
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Animations
@keyframes spin {
0% {
transform: rotateZ(0);
}
100% {
transform: rotateZ(360deg);
}
}
.container {
animation: spin 10s linear infinite;
}
See it on https://flavio-css-animations-tutorial.glitch.me
@keyframes spin {
0% {
transform: rotateZ(0);
}
25% {
transform: rotateZ(30deg);
}
50% {
transform: rotateZ(270deg);
}
75% {
transform: rotateZ(180deg);
}
100% {
transform: rotateZ(360deg);
}
}
Property Description
animation- the name of the animation, it references an animation created using
name @keyframes
animation-
duration how long the animation should last, in seconds
animation-
timing-
the timing function used by the animation (common values: linear ,
function ease ). Default: ease
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Animations
animation-
iteration-
how many times the animation should be performed. Expects a number, or
count infinite . Default: 1
defines how to style the element when the animation ends, after it finishes
animation- its iteration count number. none or backwards go back to the first
fill-mode keyframe styles. forwards and both use the style that's set in the last
keyframe
animation-
play-state if set to paused , it pauses the animation. Default is running
The animation property is a shorthand for all these properties, in this order:
.container {
animation: name
duration
timing-function
delay
iteration-count
direction
fill-mode
play-state;
}
.container {
animation: spin 10s linear infinite;
}
animationstart
animationend
animationiteration
Be careful with animationstart , because if the animation starts on page load, your JavaScript
code is always executed after the CSS has been processed, so the animation is already
started and you cannot intercept the event.
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Animations
background
background-color
background-position
background-size
border
border-color
border-width
border-bottom
border-bottom-color
border-bottom-left-radius
border-bottom-right-radius
border-bottom-width
border-left
border-left-color
border-left-width
border-radius
border-right
border-right-color
border-right-width
border-spacing
border-top
border-top-color
border-top-left-radius
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Animations
border-top-right-radius
border-top-width
bottom
box-shadow
caret-color
clip
color
column-count
column-gap
column-rule
column-rule-color
column-rule-width
column-width
columns
content
filter
flex
flex-basis
flex-grow
flex-shrink
font
font-size
font-size-adjust
font-stretch
font-weight
grid-area
grid-auto-columns
grid-auto-flow
grid-auto-rows
grid-column-end
grid-column-gap
grid-column-start
grid-column
grid-gap
grid-row-end
grid-row-gap
grid-row-start
grid-row
grid-template-areas
grid-template-columns
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Animations
grid-template-rows
grid-template
grid
height
left
letter-spacing
line-height
margin
margin-bottom
margin-left
margin-right
margin-top
max-height
max-width
min-height
min-width
opacity
order
outline
outline-color
outline-offset
outline-width
padding
padding-bottom
padding-left
padding-right
padding-top
perspective
perspective-origin
quotes
right
tab-size
text-decoration
text-decoration-color
text-indent
text-shadow
top
transform.
vertical-align
visibility
163
Animations
width
word-spacing
z-index
164
Normalizing CSS
Normalizing CSS
The default browser stylesheet is the set of rules that browser have to apply some minimum
style to elements.
Since every browser has its own set, it's common finding a common ground.
Rather than removing all defaults, like one of the CSS reset approaches do, the normalizing
process removes browser inconsistencies, while keeping a basic set of rules you can rely on.
You must load the normalizing CSS file before any other CSS.
165
Error handling
Error handling
CSS is resilient. When it finds an error, it does not act like JavaScript which packs up all its
things and goes away altogether, terminating all the script execution after the error is found.
If a line has an error, it skips it and jumps to the next line without any error.
p {
font-size: 20px
color: black;
border: 1px solid black;
}
the line with the error AND the next one will not be applied, but the third rule will be
successfully applied on the page. Basically, it scans all until it finds a semicolon, but when it
reaches it, the rule is now font-size: 20px color: black; , which is invalid, so it skips it.
Sometimes it's tricky to realize there is an error somewhere, and where that error is, because
the browser won't tell us.
166
Vendor prefixes
Vendor prefixes
Vendor prefixes are one way browsers use to give us CSS developers access to newer
features not yet considered stable.
Before going on keep in mind this approach is declining in popularity though, in favour of using
experimental flags, which must be enabled explicitly in the user's browser.
Mostly because once you add a flag and developers start using it in production, browsers are
in a bad position if they realise something must change. With flags, you can't ship a feature
unless you can push all your visitors to enable that flag in their browser (just joking, don't try).
I specifically remember them for working with CSS Transitions in the past. Instead of just using
the transition property, you had to do this:
.myClass {
-webkit-transition: all 1s linear;
-moz-transition: all 1s linear;
-ms-transition: all 1s linear;
-o-transition: all 1s linear;
transition: all 1s linear;
}
.myClass {
transition: all 1s linear;
}
-moz- (Safari)
167
Vendor prefixes
Since Opera is Chromium-based and Edge will soon be too, -o- and -ms- will probably go
soon out of fashion. But as we said, vendor prefixes as a whole are going out of fashion, too.
Writing prefixes is hard, mostly because of uncertainty. Do you actually need a prefix for one
property? Several online resources are outdated, too, which makes it even harder to do right.
Projects like Autoprefixer can automate the process in its entirety without us needing to find
out if a prefix is needed any more, or the feature is now stable and the prefix should be
dropped. It uses data from caniuse.com, a very good reference site for all things related to
browser support.
If you use React or Vue, projects like create-react-app and Vue CLI, two common ways to
start building an application, use autoprefixer out of the box, so you don't even have to worry
about it.
168
CSS for print
Even with blog posts. I remember one time back in 2009 I met a person that told me he made
his personal assistant print every blog post I published (yes, I stared blankly for a little bit).
Definitely unexpected.
My main use case for looking into printing usually is printing to a PDF. I might create
something inside the browser, and I want to make it available as PDF.
Browsers make this very easy, with Chrome defaulting to "Save" when trying to print a
document and a printer is not available, and Safari has a dedicated button in the menu bar:
Print CSS
Some common things you might want to do when printing is to hide some parts of the
document, maybe the footer, something in the header, the sidebar.
Maybe you want to use a different font for printing, which is totally legit.
If you have a large CSS for print, you'd better use a separate file for it. Browsers will only
download it when printing:
<link rel="stylesheet"
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CSS for print
src="print.css"
type="text/css"
media="print" />
@media print {
/* ... */
}
Links
HTML is great because of links. It's called HyperText for a good reason. When printing we
might lose a lot of information, depending on the content.
CSS offers a great way to solve this problem by editing the content, appending the link after
the <a> tag text, using:
@media print {
a[href*='//']:after {
content:" (" attr(href) ") ";
color: $primary;
}
}
I target a[href*='//'] to only do this for external links. I might have internal links for
navigation and internal indexing purposes, which would be useless in most of my use cases. If
you also want internal links to be printed, just do:
@media print {
a:after {
content:" (" attr(href) ") ";
color: $primary;
}
}
Page margins
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CSS for print
You can add margins to every single page. cm or in is a good unit for paper printing.
@page {
margin-top: 2cm;
margin-bottom: 2cm;
margin-left: 2cm;
margin-right: 2cm;
}
@page can also be used to only target the first page, using @page :first , or only the left and
Page breaks
You might want to add a page break after some elements, or before them. Use page-break-
after and page-break-before :
.book-date {
page-break-after: always;
}
.post-content {
page-break-before: always;
}
Use
p {
page-break-inside: avoid;
}
and wrap your images in a p tag. Targeting img directly didn't work in my tests.
This applies to other content as well, not just images. If you notice something is cut when you
don't want, use this property.
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CSS for print
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CSS for print
173