I want to highlight child rows in different color using CSS to differentiate parent/child rows.
When you use your browser's DOM inspector, you'll notice that table rows (tr) of a p:treeTable are classed with ui-node-level-n. N is the level, starting at 1. So root items are level 1, children of level 1 are level 2 and so on. To have white root nodes and yellow child nodes, you can use the following CSS rules:
html body .ui-treetable .ui-treetable-data>tr {
background: yellow;
}
body .ui-treetable .ui-treetable-data>tr.ui-node-level-1 {
background: white;
}
See also:
How do I override default PrimeFaces CSS with custom styles?
Related
Does anyone have an example showing how column headings can be styled in an Interactive Grid?
I would like the column headings in each of the 4 different Column Groups to have a different background color to make the groups more distinguishable:
It doesn't look like there is a way to easily assign a style to the Column Group via the developer interface. So, I've tried to use the TH ID:
#R141502556723241100_ig_grid_vc_cur {
background-color: #242d45;
color: #ffffff;
}
but instead of changing the background-color for the Term/Element TH, it changes the background-color for whatever element is clicked on.
First add a static ID to your IG.
Static ID: my-static-id
Then you can use the following css snippet:
/*
where the value between the quotation marks ("") is the index of the column heading
*/
#my-static-id th[data-idx="0"] {
background-color: rebeccapurple;
}
#my-static-id th[data-idx="1"] {
background-color: green;
}
The result:
I know CSS selector with the highest specificity takes precedence (i.e. .classname < #idname).
I also know that if things are the same specificity, then the last statement called takes precedence:
.classname1 { color: red; }
.classname1 { color: blue; } // classname1 color will be blue
Does the ordering of HTML classes on a DOM element affect the statement priority?
I have to disagree slightly with Jon and Watson's answers, as...
Yes, it Can (depending on the statement)
Your question is:
Does the ordering of CSS classes on a DOM element affect the statement priority?
Which does depend on the statement in question.
HTML Ordering Does Not Typically Matter
The following are equivalent when it comes to a straight call to a class (i.e. .class1 or .class2) or to a combined call (i.e. .class1.class2 or .class2.class1):
<div class="class1 class2"></div>
<div class="class2 class1"></div>
Cases Where Statement Priority for above HTML Can be Affected Based on HTML Order
The main place where ordering in HTML matters is with the use of attribute selectors in your CSS.
Example 1 Fiddle using the following code seeking to match attribute value will NOT have any change in font color, and each div will have different properties because of the ordering of the classes:
[class="class1"] {
color: red;
}
[class="class1 class2"] {
background-color: yellow;
}
[class="class2 class1"] {
border: 1px solid blue;
}
Example 2 Fiddle using the following code seeking to match beginning of attribute value will NOT have any change in font color for the second div, and each div will have different properties because of the ordering of the classes:
[class^="class1"] {
color: red;
}
[class^="class1 class2"] {
background-color: yellow;
}
[class^="class2 class1"] {
border: 1px solid blue;
}
Example 3 Fiddle using the following code seeking to match end of attribute value will NOT have any change in font color for the first div, and each div will have different properties because of the ordering of the classes:
[class$="class1"] {
color: red;
}
[class$="class1 class2"] {
background-color: yellow;
}
[class$="class2 class1"] {
border: 1px solid blue;
}
A Clarifying Statement about "Priority"
To be clear, in the cases above, what is affected as far as "statement priority" is concerned is really a matter of whether the statement actually applies or not to the element. But since the application or not is in a sense, the basic priority, and since the above are cases where such application is actually based on the ordering of the classes on the HTML Dom element (rather than the presence or absence of the class), I thought it worth adding this as an answer.
Possible Valid Use of Class Ordering?
This is a thought occurring to me, based on BoltClock's comment. Consider just two classes being used to style elements based on whatever factors are deemed critical to different styling. These two classes theoretically can replace the use of eleven different individual classes using the combination of attribute selectors (actually, as will be noted later, the possibilities are almost limitless with but a single class, but I'll discuss that in a moment since this post is about ordering of multiple classes). For these two classes we can style elements differently as follows:
Assuming these HTML Combinations
<div class="class1">Element 1</div>
<div class="class2">Element 2</div>
<div class="class1 class2">Element 3</div>
<div class="class2 class1">Element 4</div>
CSS Possibilities
/* simply has the class */
.class1 {} /* affects elements 1, 3, 4 */
.class2 {} /* affects elements 2-4 */
/* has only a single class */
[class="class1"] {} /* affects element 1 only */
[class="class2"] {} /* affects element 2 only */
/* simply has both classes */
.class1.class2 {} /* affects elements 3-4 */
/* has both classes, but in a particular order */
[class="class1 class2"] {} /* affects element 3 only */
[class="class2 class1"] {} /* affects element 4 only */
/* begins with a class */
[class^="class1"] {} /* affects elements 1 & 3 only */
[class^="class2"] {} /* affects elements 2 & 4 only */
/* ends with a class
NOTE: that with only two classes, this is the reverse of the above and is somewhat
superfluous; however, if a third class is introduced, then the beginning and ending
class combinations become more relevant.
*/
[class$="class1"] {} /* affects elements 2 & 4 only */
[class$="class2"] {} /* affects elements 1 & 3 only */
If I calculate right, 3 classes could give at least 40 combinations of selector options.
To clarify my note about "limitless" possibilities, given the right logic, a single class can potentially have imbedded in it code combinations that are looked for via the [attr*=value] syntax.
Is all this too complex to manage? Possibly. That may depend on the logic of exactly how it is implemented. The point I am trying to bring out is that it is possible with CSS3 to have ordering of classes be significant if one desired it and planned for it, and it might not be horribly wrong to be utilizing the power of CSS in that way.
No, it does not. The relevant part of the W3C standard makes no mention of the order of appearance for classes.
No, it does not, like you said, if two rules have the same specificity, the one that comes later in your CSS will be applied.
No. But if you want to make one of your declaration blocks to has more precedence (w/o many !importants) make its selector more specific.
For example, for a div:
div.classname1 { color: red; } /* classname1 color will be red (for `div`s) */
.classname1 { color: blue; }
What's missing or a little hard to find in other answers is this:
What matters is the order in which the browser reads/parses the class names
The class defined last will win
.a {
color: red;
}
.b {
color: blue;
}
<div class="a b">This text will be blue</div>
<div class="b a">This text will ALSO be blue</div>
Example comes from this source
May be affected by the order of your imports
Because if this you may need to pay attention to how you import CSS in your files.
For example in my JavaScript based project I have a component that I can pass extra classes to. In order for my own classes to overwrite styles of the classes of the component itself I need to first import the component I wish to style (which will import its own styles) and only then import my own styles:
//import the component first, which will import css
import {SomeComponent} from 'some-library/SomeComponent';
//And THEN our own styles
import './styles.css';
return <SomeComponent className={myClassName} />
Like this my buildprocess (Webpack) will put my own classes later in the CSS bundle than the components ones.
I am using sapui5 where all the tables are preformatted
with SAP's css classes.
I have my own table where I want to remove all borders .
The table is designed with the id selector.
My question: how am I to remove SAP's class restraint
so that only my table is excluded from this class
attributes
e.g
#myTableClass :not .SAPClass>tr
{
border : 0px !important;
}
All other tables in my HTML doc should go
on inherting SAP's original class attributes.
Any suugestion will be highly appreciated
rgds
Yuval
If you're just trying to apply no borders on the table, do this:
.your-class-name {
border: none !important;
}
I know CSS selector with the highest specificity takes precedence (i.e. .classname < #idname).
I also know that if things are the same specificity, then the last statement called takes precedence:
.classname1 { color: red; }
.classname1 { color: blue; } // classname1 color will be blue
Does the ordering of HTML classes on a DOM element affect the statement priority?
I have to disagree slightly with Jon and Watson's answers, as...
Yes, it Can (depending on the statement)
Your question is:
Does the ordering of CSS classes on a DOM element affect the statement priority?
Which does depend on the statement in question.
HTML Ordering Does Not Typically Matter
The following are equivalent when it comes to a straight call to a class (i.e. .class1 or .class2) or to a combined call (i.e. .class1.class2 or .class2.class1):
<div class="class1 class2"></div>
<div class="class2 class1"></div>
Cases Where Statement Priority for above HTML Can be Affected Based on HTML Order
The main place where ordering in HTML matters is with the use of attribute selectors in your CSS.
Example 1 Fiddle using the following code seeking to match attribute value will NOT have any change in font color, and each div will have different properties because of the ordering of the classes:
[class="class1"] {
color: red;
}
[class="class1 class2"] {
background-color: yellow;
}
[class="class2 class1"] {
border: 1px solid blue;
}
Example 2 Fiddle using the following code seeking to match beginning of attribute value will NOT have any change in font color for the second div, and each div will have different properties because of the ordering of the classes:
[class^="class1"] {
color: red;
}
[class^="class1 class2"] {
background-color: yellow;
}
[class^="class2 class1"] {
border: 1px solid blue;
}
Example 3 Fiddle using the following code seeking to match end of attribute value will NOT have any change in font color for the first div, and each div will have different properties because of the ordering of the classes:
[class$="class1"] {
color: red;
}
[class$="class1 class2"] {
background-color: yellow;
}
[class$="class2 class1"] {
border: 1px solid blue;
}
A Clarifying Statement about "Priority"
To be clear, in the cases above, what is affected as far as "statement priority" is concerned is really a matter of whether the statement actually applies or not to the element. But since the application or not is in a sense, the basic priority, and since the above are cases where such application is actually based on the ordering of the classes on the HTML Dom element (rather than the presence or absence of the class), I thought it worth adding this as an answer.
Possible Valid Use of Class Ordering?
This is a thought occurring to me, based on BoltClock's comment. Consider just two classes being used to style elements based on whatever factors are deemed critical to different styling. These two classes theoretically can replace the use of eleven different individual classes using the combination of attribute selectors (actually, as will be noted later, the possibilities are almost limitless with but a single class, but I'll discuss that in a moment since this post is about ordering of multiple classes). For these two classes we can style elements differently as follows:
Assuming these HTML Combinations
<div class="class1">Element 1</div>
<div class="class2">Element 2</div>
<div class="class1 class2">Element 3</div>
<div class="class2 class1">Element 4</div>
CSS Possibilities
/* simply has the class */
.class1 {} /* affects elements 1, 3, 4 */
.class2 {} /* affects elements 2-4 */
/* has only a single class */
[class="class1"] {} /* affects element 1 only */
[class="class2"] {} /* affects element 2 only */
/* simply has both classes */
.class1.class2 {} /* affects elements 3-4 */
/* has both classes, but in a particular order */
[class="class1 class2"] {} /* affects element 3 only */
[class="class2 class1"] {} /* affects element 4 only */
/* begins with a class */
[class^="class1"] {} /* affects elements 1 & 3 only */
[class^="class2"] {} /* affects elements 2 & 4 only */
/* ends with a class
NOTE: that with only two classes, this is the reverse of the above and is somewhat
superfluous; however, if a third class is introduced, then the beginning and ending
class combinations become more relevant.
*/
[class$="class1"] {} /* affects elements 2 & 4 only */
[class$="class2"] {} /* affects elements 1 & 3 only */
If I calculate right, 3 classes could give at least 40 combinations of selector options.
To clarify my note about "limitless" possibilities, given the right logic, a single class can potentially have imbedded in it code combinations that are looked for via the [attr*=value] syntax.
Is all this too complex to manage? Possibly. That may depend on the logic of exactly how it is implemented. The point I am trying to bring out is that it is possible with CSS3 to have ordering of classes be significant if one desired it and planned for it, and it might not be horribly wrong to be utilizing the power of CSS in that way.
No, it does not. The relevant part of the W3C standard makes no mention of the order of appearance for classes.
No, it does not, like you said, if two rules have the same specificity, the one that comes later in your CSS will be applied.
No. But if you want to make one of your declaration blocks to has more precedence (w/o many !importants) make its selector more specific.
For example, for a div:
div.classname1 { color: red; } /* classname1 color will be red (for `div`s) */
.classname1 { color: blue; }
What's missing or a little hard to find in other answers is this:
What matters is the order in which the browser reads/parses the class names
The class defined last will win
.a {
color: red;
}
.b {
color: blue;
}
<div class="a b">This text will be blue</div>
<div class="b a">This text will ALSO be blue</div>
Example comes from this source
May be affected by the order of your imports
Because if this you may need to pay attention to how you import CSS in your files.
For example in my JavaScript based project I have a component that I can pass extra classes to. In order for my own classes to overwrite styles of the classes of the component itself I need to first import the component I wish to style (which will import its own styles) and only then import my own styles:
//import the component first, which will import css
import {SomeComponent} from 'some-library/SomeComponent';
//And THEN our own styles
import './styles.css';
return <SomeComponent className={myClassName} />
Like this my buildprocess (Webpack) will put my own classes later in the CSS bundle than the components ones.
I am trying to make a specific column to blue color.
For that I am using
clientsTable.addColumnStyleName(3,"nameColumn");
And the CSS is:
nameColumn {
color:blue;
}
but it's not doing anything whereas if I change my CSS to this
nameColumn {
background-color:blue;
}
it works, i.e make header color red , but why is not changing text color ?
thanks
addColumnStyleName adds the CSS class to a <col> element in the DOM, and only a handful CSS properties apply there (see also browser compatibility table)
You'd want to apply a CSS class to each cell in the column instead, using Column#setCellStyleNames()
Try
.nameColumn {
color: blue !important;
}