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there is a problem that I have had since I started using CSS everything selector [*] with multiple [:not()].
Examples below does not work as I tried:
.post-body *:not(.has-color):not(.has-bg){
color: red
}
.post-body *:not(.has-color)*:not(.has-bg){
color: red
}
.post-body *:not(.has-color .has-bg){
color: red
}
.post-body *:not(.has-color , .has-bg){
color: red
}
Imagine something like WordPress post content; I can not change the content whole structure but I do need to set a primary color for texts which do not have a specific background or text color. So I am trying to set Red Color to any element except elements that contain ".has-color" or ".has-bg" that is it there is no relation between them.
Has somebody solved this issue or even seemed to something like this?
Your first example should work, as shown in this CodePen, but as Louys notes, it’s hard to tell without any markup.
.post-body *:not(.has-color):not(.has-bg) {
color: red;
}
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I can't seem to find how to change the text-color from black to white whenever I hover over the schedule over here http://apavtcongresso.staging.wpengine.com/
Scroll down to "PROGRAMA" and you'll find the schedule, it has a couple of tabs named "Day - 01, Day - 02" etc, inside there's black text that I wish to change to white whenever I hover over the tabs. I've already changed the :active color but I can't find the right classes to customize the css of hover, any help please?
Thanks.
.your-div-class:hover, .your-div-class:focus {
color: #fff;
}
side note: check in your code that .your-div-class or any class associated to its inner text hasn't a color assigned with !important, in that case either remove the !important or assign it to the hover too.
EDIT: try this:
.schedule-layout2 .schedule-nav li:hover .day-number {
color: #fff !important;
}
.schedule-layout2 .schedule-nav li:hover .schedule-date {
color: #fff !important;
}
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Was getting into CSS and web development and I have seen some sites that have example a submit button or just an input where when the mouse/ cursor goes over the top of the element it would change the element,
To explain a bit better, the submit button might be red and black text, and if you hover over the submit button it would go black and change to red text,
I just wanted to know how that was done cause I would like to put that on my sites, thanks!
I have searched google alot for information on how to do this but I have come up with nothing, best regards,
Jack.
Use the :hover selector. See the following examples, how to do that:
button,
input[type="submit"] {
background-color:#000;
color:#f00;
}
button:hover,
input[type="submit"]:hover {
background-color:#f00;
color:#000;
}
<button>Test</button>
<input type="submit" value="Test"/>
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I'm thinking about css refacto in my job, and i'm wondering if it's a good idea (considering best practices) to create css class with only one property.
A simple example, is it usefull to create many classes this way
.center-text {
text-align: center;
}
What's the best between doing this or using small libs like Knacss (if you know it) for example.
BIGGEST PROBLEM WITH CSS CLASSES: THEIR LOCATION INSIDE YOUR FILE / CODE MATTERS!!
lets assume we have this html element:
<div class="test altr">some text</div>
this css file:
.test
{
color: red;
}
.altr
{
color: blue;
}
will result in a blue text (the div has those 2 classes). BUT this file will result with a red color:
.altr
{
color: blue;
}
.test
{
color: red;
}
the order of command in css is determine by the css file (and not the order inside the html class attribute)
not to mention that the physical order between and tags inside your html alo affects the order of commands in css (last command override all previous commands)
so.. whatever you do - please be careful with that
One minor drawback I see is the amount of text in your HTML will increase slightly due to pile up of classes. Not best SEO practices, but it's minor.
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Link: jsfiddle.net/d8p00ca5/2/
I want to give icons a certain color(lets say red) and text another color(black).
But when I hover the link, icon and text should have the same color(yellow).
How can I do that?
a:hover > .fa {
color:yellow;
}
Note, this selector is very general and may not be appropriate in all situations.
Alternatively,
a.circle:hover > .fa {
color:yellow;
}
Is a little more specific.
Jsfiddlde Demo
You just need to add .circle:hover .fa {color:yellow;}
http://jsfiddle.net/d8p00ca5/4/
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Two different paragraph can be given two different type of colours using the below css code.
.paraStyle1{
color: rgb(100,100,100);
}
.paraStyle2{
color: rgb(200,200,200);
}
Now, In the html code i can Specify
<p class="paraStyle1">Hello</p>
<p class="paraStyle2">Hello There</p>
The above CSS code can be modified to as Shown below, So which one should be used, considering best coding Technique(Design).
p.paraStyle1{
color: rgb(100,100,100);
}
p.paraStyle2{
color: rgb(200,200,200);
}
Classes can be duplicated which means a p tag and a div tag can have same class.
But if you want to style only the p tag then you should follow the second style. If you are not using your class anywhere else except for the p tag you can use the first style.
.paraStyle1{
color: rgb(100,100,100);
}
.paraStyle2{
color: rgb(200,200,200);
}
will not be limited to p tags....it can be allocated to any tag having the class paraStyle1 or paraStyle2, it can be a,p or even a div... see demo here
p.paraStyle1{
color: rgb(100,100,100);
}
p.paraStyle2{
color: rgb(200,200,200);
}
is specifically for the p tags having classes paraStyle1 or paraStyle2....no other html tag can avail the style of these classes except p tags.... see demo here !!
The second syntax (p.paraStyle1) applies the contained css only to p tags with the paraStyle1 class. You should use this syntax if you are planning on reusing that class name with different styling for different tags.
When you specify your CSS selector to be p.<class>, it means that you only want the p tags with that class to be styled. However, if you need this same style to be applied to other tags as well (eg a <div> tag), then use the first method.