Can a CSS class inherit one or more other classes? - css

Is it possible to make a CSS class that "inherits" from another CSS class (or more than one).
For example, say we had:
.something { display:inline }
.else { background:red }
What I'd like to do is something like this:
.composite
{
.something;
.else
}
where the ".composite" class would both display inline and have a red background

There are tools like LESS, which allow you to compose CSS at a higher level of abstraction similar to what you describe.
Less calls these "Mixins"
Instead of
/* CSS */
#header {
-moz-border-radius: 8px;
-webkit-border-radius: 8px;
border-radius: 8px;
}
#footer {
-moz-border-radius: 8px;
-webkit-border-radius: 8px;
border-radius: 8px;
}
You could say
/* LESS */
.rounded_corners {
-moz-border-radius: 8px;
-webkit-border-radius: 8px;
border-radius: 8px;
}
#header {
.rounded_corners;
}
#footer {
.rounded_corners;
}

You can add multiple classes to a single DOM element, e.g.
<div class="firstClass secondClass thirdclass fourthclass"></div>
Rules given in later classes (or which are more specific) override. So the fourthclass in that example kind of prevails.
Inheritance is not part of the CSS standard.

Yes, but not exactly with that syntax.
.composite,
.something { display:inline }
.composite,
.else { background:red }

Keep your common attributes together and assign specific (or override) attributes again.
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ */
/* Headings */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ */
h1, h2, h3, h4
{
font-family : myfind-bold;
color : #4C4C4C;
display:inline-block;
width:900px;
text-align:left;
background-image: linear-gradient(0, #F4F4F4, #FEFEFE);/* IE6 & IE7 */
}
h1
{
font-size : 300%;
padding : 45px 40px 45px 0px;
}
h2
{
font-size : 200%;
padding : 30px 25px 30px 0px;
}

The SCSS way for the given example, would be something like:
.something {
display: inline
}
.else {
background: red
}
.composite {
#extend .something;
#extend .else;
}
More info, check the sass basics

An element can take multiple classes:
.classOne { font-weight: bold; }
.classTwo { font-famiy: verdana; }
<div class="classOne classTwo">
<p>I'm bold and verdana.</p>
</div>
And that's about as close as you're going to get unfortunately. I'd love to see this feature, along with class-aliases someday.

No you can't do something like
.composite
{
.something;
.else
}
This are no "class" names in the OO sense. .something and .else are just selectors nothing more.
But you can either specify two classes on an element
<div class="something else">...</div>
or you might look into another form of inheritance
.foo {
background-color: white;
color: black;
}
.bar {
background-color: inherit;
color: inherit;
font-weight: normal;
}
<div class="foo">
<p class="bar">Hello, world</p>
</div>
Where the paragraphs backgroundcolor and color are inherited from the settings in the enclosing div which is .foo styled. You might have to check the exact W3C specification. inherit is default for most properties anyway but not for all.

I ran into this same problem and ended up using a JQuery solution to make it seem like a class can inherit other classes.
<script>
$(function(){
$(".composite").addClass("something else");
});
</script>
This will find all elements with the class "composite" and add the classes "something" and "else" to the elements. So something like <div class="composite">...</div> will end up like so: <div class="composite something else">...</div>

You can do is this
CSS
.car {
font-weight: bold;
}
.benz {
background-color: blue;
}
.toyota {
background-color: white;
}
HTML
<div class="car benz">
<p>I'm bold and blue.</p>
</div>
<div class="car toyota">
<p>I'm bold and white.</p>
</div>

Don't forget:
div.something.else {
// will only style a div with both, not just one or the other
}

You can use the converse approach to achieve the same result - start from the composite and then remove styling using the unset keyword. For example, if you start with the following sample composition:
.composite {
color: red;
margin-left: 50px;
background-color: green
}
you can then increase selector specificity to selectively remove styles using unset:
.composite.no-color {
color: unset
}
.composite.no-margin-left {
margin-left: unset
}
.composite.no-background-color {
background-color: unset
}
Here is a JSFiddle demonstrating this approach.
One benefit of this approach is that because the specificity of the compound selectors is higher than the composite itself, you do not need all of the combinations of classes to achieve the desired results for multiple combinations:
/* Multi-unset compound selector combinations, such as the one that follows, ARE NOT NECESSARY because of the higher specificity of each individual compound selectors listed above. This keeps things simple. */
.composite.no-background-color.no-color.no-margin-left {
background-color: unset;
color: unset;
margin-left: unset
}
Furthermore, at 96% support for the unset keyword, browser coverage is excellent.

Perfect timing: I went from this question to my email, to find an article about Less, a Ruby library that among other things does this:
Since super looks just like footer, but with a different font, I'll use Less's class inclusion technique (they call it a mixin) to tell it to include these declarations too:
#super {
#footer;
font-family: cursive;
}

In Css file:
p.Title
{
font-family: Arial;
font-size: 16px;
}
p.SubTitle p.Title
{
font-size: 12px;
}

I realize this question is now very old but, here goes nothin!
If the intent is to add a single class that implies the properties of multiple classes, as a native solution, I would recommend using JavaScript/jQuery (jQuery is really not necessary but certainly useful)
If you have, for instance .umbrellaClass that "inherits" from .baseClass1 and .baseClass2 you could have some JavaScript that fires on ready.
$(".umbrellaClass").addClass("baseClass1");
$(".umbrellaClass").addClass("baseClass2");
Now all elements of .umbrellaClass will have all the properties of both .baseClasss. Note that, like OOP inheritance, .umbrellaClass may or may not have its own properties.
The only caveat here is to consider whether there are elements being dynamically created that won't exist when this code fires, but there are simple ways around that as well.
Sucks css doesn't have native inheritance, though.

Unfortunately, CSS does not provide 'inheritance' in the way that programming languages like C++, C# or Java do. You can't declare a CSS class an then extend it with another CSS class.
However, you can apply more than a single class to an tag in your markup ... in which case there is a sophisticated set of rules that determine which actual styles will get applied by the browser.
<span class="styleA styleB"> ... </span>
CSS will look for all the styles that can be applied based on what your markup, and combine the CSS styles from those multiple rules together.
Typically, the styles are merged, but when conflicts arise, the later declared style will generally win (unless the !important attribute is specified on one of the styles, in which case that wins). Also, styles applied directly to an HTML element take precedence over CSS class styles.

Don't think of css classes as object oriented classes, think of them as merely a tool among other selectors to specify which attribute classes an html element is styled by. Think of everything between the braces as the attribute class, and selectors on the left-hand side tell the elements they select to inherit attributes from the attribute class. Example:
.foo, .bar { font-weight : bold; font-size : 2em; /* attribute class A */}
.foo { color : green; /* attribute class B */}
When an element is given the attribute class="foo", it is useful to think of it not as inheriting attributes from class .foo, but from attribute class A and attribute class B. I.e., the inheritance graph is one level deep, with elements deriving from attribute classes, and the selectors specifying where the edges go, and determining precedence when there are competing attributes (similar to method resolution order).
The practical implication for programming is this. Say you have the style sheet given above, and want to add a new class .baz, where it should have the same font-size as .foo. The naive solution would be this:
.foo, .bar { font-weight : bold; font-size : 2em; /* attribute class A */}
.foo { color : green; /* attribute class B */}
.baz { font-size : 2em; /* attribute class C, hidden dependency! */}
Any time I have to type something twice I get so mad! Not only do I have to write it twice, now I have no way of programatically indicating that .foo and .baz should have the same font-size, and I've created a hidden dependency! My above paradigm would suggest that I should abstract out the font-size attribute from attribute class A:
.foo, .bar, .baz { font-size : 2em; /* attribute base class for A */}
.foo, .bar { font-weight : bold; /* attribute class A */}
.foo { color : green; /* attribute class B */}
The main complaint here is that now I have to retype every selector from attribute class A again to specify that the elements they should select should also inherit attributes from attribute base class A. Still, the alternatives are to have to remember to edit every attribute class where there are hidden dependencies each time something changes, or to use a third party tool. The first option makes god laugh, the second makes me want to kill myself.

That's not possible in CSS.
The only thing supported in CSS is being more specific than another rule:
span { display:inline }
span.myclass { background: red }
A span with class "myclass" will have both properties.
Another way is by specifying two classes:
<div class="something else">...</div>
The style of "else" will override (or add) the style of "something"

As others have said, you can add multiple classes to an element.
But that's not really the point. I get your question about inheritance. The real point is that inheritance in CSS is done not through classes, but through element hierarchies. So to model inherited traits you need to apply them to different levels of elements in the DOM.

While direct inheritance isn't possible.
It is possible to use a class (or id) for a parent tag and then use CSS combinators to alter child tag behaviour from it's heirarchy.
p.test{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
<p class="test"><span>One <span>possible <span>solution <span>is <span>using <span>multiple <span>nested <span>tags</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
I wouldn't suggest using so many spans like the example, however it's just a proof of concept. There are still many bugs that can arise when trying to apply CSS in this manner. (For example altering text-decoration types).

I was looking for that like crazy too and I just figured it out by trying different things :P... Well you can do it like that:
composite.something, composite.else
{
blblalba
}
It suddenly worked for me :)

In specific circumstances you can do a "soft" inheritance:
.composite
{
display:inherit;
background:inherit;
}
.something { display:inline }
.else { background:red }
This only works if you are adding the .composite class to a child element. It is "soft" inheritance because any values not specified in .composite are not inherited obviously. Keep in mind it would still be less characters to simply write "inline" and "red" instead of "inherit".
Here is a list of properties and whether or not they do this automatically:
https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/propidx.html

Less and Sass are CSS pre-processors which extend CSS language in valuable ways. Just one of many improvements they offer is just the option you're looking for. There are some very good answers with Less and I will add Sass solution.
Sass has extend option which allows one class to be fully extended to another one. More about extend you can read in this article

I think this one is a better solution:
[class*=“button-“] {
/* base button properties */
}
.button-primary { ... }
.button-plain { ... }

Actually what you're asking for exists - however it's done as add-on modules. Check out this question on Better CSS in .NET for examples.
Check out Larsenal's answer on using LESS to get an idea of what these add-ons do.

CSS doesn't really do what you're asking. If you want to write rules with that composite idea in mind, you may want to check out compass. It's a stylesheet framework which looks similar to the already mentioned Less.
It lets you do mixins and all that good business.

For those who are not satisfied with the mentioned (excellent) posts, you can use your programming skills to make a variable (PHP or whichever) and have it store the multiple class names.
That's the best hack I could come up with.
<style>
.red { color: red; }
.bold { font-weight: bold; }
</style>
<? define('DANGERTEXT','red bold'); ?>
Then apply the global variable to the element you desire rather than the class names themselves
<span class="<?=DANGERTEXT?>"> Le Champion est Ici </span>

Have a look at CSS compose:
https://bambielli.com/til/2017-08-11-css-modules-composes/
according to them:
.serif-font {
font-family: Georgia, serif;
}
.display {
composes: serif-font;
font-size: 30px;
line-height: 35px;
}
I use it in my react project.

If you want a more powerful text preprocessor than LESS, check out PPWizard:
http://dennisbareis.com/ppwizard.htm
Warning the website is truly hideous and there's a small learning curve, but it's perfect for building both CSS and HTML code via macros. I've never understood why more web coders don't use it.

You can achieve what you want if you preprocess your .css files through php.
...
$something='color:red;'
$else='display:inline;';
echo '.something {'. $something .'}';
echo '.else {'. $something .'}';
echo '.somethingelse {'. $something .$else '}';
...

Related

Assign Styles to a selector from another selector CSS

Is there a way to have a class or any selector with specific styles, and then share, import or assign those styles to a another selector. This is to avid creating multiple classes and not having to go back to the HTML code all the time to assign such classes.
For example:
.orangeText{
color:orange
}
.strongtext{
font-weight:900
}
a regular scenario would use those clases like this:
<div class="orangeText strongtext">My orange Strong Text</div>
I am looking for something like this:
.orangeText{
color:orange
}
.strongtext{
font-weight:900
}
.orangeStrongTitle{
#.orangeText; /* Import styles from .orangeText*/
#.strongtext; /* Import styles from .strongtext*/
text-decoration:underline;
}
ON HTML:
<div class="orangeStrongTitle">My orange Strong Text</div>
PLEASE NOTE THAT #.orangeText IS MY INVENTION TO GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF WHAT I WANT, I DON'T KNOW IF SUCH THING EXISTS, I WAS INSPIRED ON #import
Is this possible?
With traditional CSS it seem's that you can't.
See this topic : Is it possible to combine classes in CSS?
Unless you use LESS or SASS's 'mixin' features, there's no real way in
plain CSS to "inherit" other classes. The best you can do is apply
all three classes to your DOM element. If your problem is that you
have a ton of those classes already on a page and you want to add
properties to all of them, you can do:
.foo, .bar, .foobar {
color: red;
}
and that will apply color: red to any element that has .foo or .bar or
.foobar.
EDIT
Since you're asking for an exemple, here is how the mixin feature of SASS works :
#mixin mixin-name {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
ul {
#include mixin-name;
}
Having this will compile into this :
ul {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}

How to make inheritence in CSS?

I have the following problem:
I have a font with a given style in a css class:
.font_arial_36 {
font-family:Arial;
font-size:36px;
}
And now I have a css that gives me the size of a div in a given situation:
.a_div_test {
width:300px;
max-width:350px;
}
I want the a_div_test to have the properties of the font_arial_36, like an inheritance.
Somethin like (this is wrong just posting what I wanted):
.font_arial_36 {
font-family:Arial;
font-size:36px;
}
.a_div_test extends font_arial_36 {
width:300px;
max-width:350px;
}
and now the .a_div_test should also have the font_arial_36 properties.
Is it possible with css?
PS: I do not want to add multiple classes to an Html Element like that:
<div class="font_arial_36 a_div_test"></div>
Because I should rewrite my code in many places where .a_div_test appear.
This is not possible in CSS. What you do is you assign the 2 classes to the element you want.
<div class="font_arial_36 a_div_test"></div>
CSS stands for "Cascading Style Sheets". That means that a top-level element will cascade its styles to its child elements. As long as .a_div_test elements are contained within the subtree of elements of .font_arial_36, they will receive (inherit) all the styles from .font_arial_36.
That's why you define a font-family inside the <body> tag if you want it to apply to all elements within the page.
That is, the inheritance is defined by the HTML structure, not the CSS itself.
why you need to extend when you can add multiple classes with space on HTML element.
<div class="font_arial_36 a_div_test">Like this</div>
As suggested by others, there is no way you can inherit once CSS property into another. Only way is to add both the class to a DOM element to mimic the inheritance. Css solution:
<button class="uiButton disabledButton">Click Here</button>
For below CSS:
.uiButton {
background-color: gray;
color: lightgray;
font-size: 20px;
font-family: "Segoe UI", Helvetica, sans-serif;
text-align: center;
text-decoration: none;
padding: 10px 10px;
border:none;
display: inline-block;
margin: 5px 5px;
cursor: pointer;
}
.disabledButton
{
background-color: gray;
color: lightgray;
cursor: not-allowed;
}
In above: The Button is first styled with uiButton class and then disabledButton class. So whichever CSS class you write later in 'class' attribute, will overwrite properties of earlier one (in case if anything is common).
But, there is a better way:
Yes, if you are ready to use CSS pre-processors like https://sass-lang.com/guide
Note that Sass is a pre-processor. Meaning, Sass file (.scss) will be compiled into CSS (but chrome provides nice debugging for .scss i.e. Sass file). You can write plain CSS in the SCSS file and additionally use directives to achieve inheritance and much more. To make the life easier, there are some software which will automatically create css when scss file is modified (I know http://koala-app.com/ which does that).
if you don't want to add multiple classes to html element then
.font_arial_36, .a_div_test {
font-family:Arial;
font-size:36px;
}
.a_div_test {
width:300px;
max-width:350px;
}
other than this no other possible way seems to be there for inheritance in css, we have to use sass

What is the simplest way to clear all pseudo classes on an element?

I am writing a stylesheet to extend a base stylesheet whose CSS has many pseudo classes applied to certain elements. I would like my stylesheet to override some of these styles with a single style that is applied to an element no matter what state it is in, whether hovered on, focussed etc.
For example, the base stylesheet might have the styles
.classname {
color:#f00;
}
.classname:hover {
color:#0f0;
}
.classname:active {
color:#00f;
}
but adding the following after these styles does not override the pseudo states...
.classname {
color:#fff;
}
The following works, but it feels a lot of code for something that seems simple.
.classname,
.classname:active,
.classname:hover,
.classname:focus,
.classname:visited,
.classname:valid{
color:#fff;
}
Likewise, I know an !important would work, but that's normally a warning sign of a poorly structured stylesheet.
Is there anything along the lines of a .classname:* that would cover every possible state, or some way to simply remove all pseudo classes?
If you are able to put the classes inside some wrapper id you can prevent the pseudo-classes to take effect due to specificity:
body {
background: black;
}
.classname {
color:#f00;
}
.classname:hover {
color:#0f0;
}
.classname:active {
color:#00f;
}
#a .classname {
color:#fff;
}
<div class="classname">all pseudo works</div>
<div id="a">
<div class="classname">none of the pseudo works</div>
</div>
I think, it could be solved with :any pseudo-class.
Google
<style>
a:link { color: blue; }
a:hover { color: red; }
a:-webkit-any(a) { color: green; }
</style>
https://jsfiddle.net/ycfokuju
Browser support is not perfect: https://developer.mozilla.org/en/docs/Web/CSS/:any
Edit:
Actually, as I discovered, this answer isn't very accurate. (Despite it was upvoted 4 times, lol).
First of all, you don't need :any fot this task. You need :any-link.
The second point is that :any itself is a former name of :matches. So, in our terminology we should use terms :any-link and :matches and don't use term :any.
Example of using :any-link: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/:any-link
Examples of using :mathes: https://css-tricks.com/almanac/selectors/m/matches/
I haven't edited the code itself, so fix it yourself according to this new information.

How to create css classes from existing ones? [duplicate]

Is it possible to make a CSS class that "inherits" from another CSS class (or more than one).
For example, say we had:
.something { display:inline }
.else { background:red }
What I'd like to do is something like this:
.composite
{
.something;
.else
}
where the ".composite" class would both display inline and have a red background
There are tools like LESS, which allow you to compose CSS at a higher level of abstraction similar to what you describe.
Less calls these "Mixins"
Instead of
/* CSS */
#header {
-moz-border-radius: 8px;
-webkit-border-radius: 8px;
border-radius: 8px;
}
#footer {
-moz-border-radius: 8px;
-webkit-border-radius: 8px;
border-radius: 8px;
}
You could say
/* LESS */
.rounded_corners {
-moz-border-radius: 8px;
-webkit-border-radius: 8px;
border-radius: 8px;
}
#header {
.rounded_corners;
}
#footer {
.rounded_corners;
}
You can add multiple classes to a single DOM element, e.g.
<div class="firstClass secondClass thirdclass fourthclass"></div>
Rules given in later classes (or which are more specific) override. So the fourthclass in that example kind of prevails.
Inheritance is not part of the CSS standard.
Yes, but not exactly with that syntax.
.composite,
.something { display:inline }
.composite,
.else { background:red }
Keep your common attributes together and assign specific (or override) attributes again.
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ */
/* Headings */
/* ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ */
h1, h2, h3, h4
{
font-family : myfind-bold;
color : #4C4C4C;
display:inline-block;
width:900px;
text-align:left;
background-image: linear-gradient(0, #F4F4F4, #FEFEFE);/* IE6 & IE7 */
}
h1
{
font-size : 300%;
padding : 45px 40px 45px 0px;
}
h2
{
font-size : 200%;
padding : 30px 25px 30px 0px;
}
The SCSS way for the given example, would be something like:
.something {
display: inline
}
.else {
background: red
}
.composite {
#extend .something;
#extend .else;
}
More info, check the sass basics
An element can take multiple classes:
.classOne { font-weight: bold; }
.classTwo { font-famiy: verdana; }
<div class="classOne classTwo">
<p>I'm bold and verdana.</p>
</div>
And that's about as close as you're going to get unfortunately. I'd love to see this feature, along with class-aliases someday.
No you can't do something like
.composite
{
.something;
.else
}
This are no "class" names in the OO sense. .something and .else are just selectors nothing more.
But you can either specify two classes on an element
<div class="something else">...</div>
or you might look into another form of inheritance
.foo {
background-color: white;
color: black;
}
.bar {
background-color: inherit;
color: inherit;
font-weight: normal;
}
<div class="foo">
<p class="bar">Hello, world</p>
</div>
Where the paragraphs backgroundcolor and color are inherited from the settings in the enclosing div which is .foo styled. You might have to check the exact W3C specification. inherit is default for most properties anyway but not for all.
I ran into this same problem and ended up using a JQuery solution to make it seem like a class can inherit other classes.
<script>
$(function(){
$(".composite").addClass("something else");
});
</script>
This will find all elements with the class "composite" and add the classes "something" and "else" to the elements. So something like <div class="composite">...</div> will end up like so: <div class="composite something else">...</div>
You can do is this
CSS
.car {
font-weight: bold;
}
.benz {
background-color: blue;
}
.toyota {
background-color: white;
}
HTML
<div class="car benz">
<p>I'm bold and blue.</p>
</div>
<div class="car toyota">
<p>I'm bold and white.</p>
</div>
Don't forget:
div.something.else {
// will only style a div with both, not just one or the other
}
You can use the converse approach to achieve the same result - start from the composite and then remove styling using the unset keyword. For example, if you start with the following sample composition:
.composite {
color: red;
margin-left: 50px;
background-color: green
}
you can then increase selector specificity to selectively remove styles using unset:
.composite.no-color {
color: unset
}
.composite.no-margin-left {
margin-left: unset
}
.composite.no-background-color {
background-color: unset
}
Here is a JSFiddle demonstrating this approach.
One benefit of this approach is that because the specificity of the compound selectors is higher than the composite itself, you do not need all of the combinations of classes to achieve the desired results for multiple combinations:
/* Multi-unset compound selector combinations, such as the one that follows, ARE NOT NECESSARY because of the higher specificity of each individual compound selectors listed above. This keeps things simple. */
.composite.no-background-color.no-color.no-margin-left {
background-color: unset;
color: unset;
margin-left: unset
}
Furthermore, at 96% support for the unset keyword, browser coverage is excellent.
Perfect timing: I went from this question to my email, to find an article about Less, a Ruby library that among other things does this:
Since super looks just like footer, but with a different font, I'll use Less's class inclusion technique (they call it a mixin) to tell it to include these declarations too:
#super {
#footer;
font-family: cursive;
}
In Css file:
p.Title
{
font-family: Arial;
font-size: 16px;
}
p.SubTitle p.Title
{
font-size: 12px;
}
I realize this question is now very old but, here goes nothin!
If the intent is to add a single class that implies the properties of multiple classes, as a native solution, I would recommend using JavaScript/jQuery (jQuery is really not necessary but certainly useful)
If you have, for instance .umbrellaClass that "inherits" from .baseClass1 and .baseClass2 you could have some JavaScript that fires on ready.
$(".umbrellaClass").addClass("baseClass1");
$(".umbrellaClass").addClass("baseClass2");
Now all elements of .umbrellaClass will have all the properties of both .baseClasss. Note that, like OOP inheritance, .umbrellaClass may or may not have its own properties.
The only caveat here is to consider whether there are elements being dynamically created that won't exist when this code fires, but there are simple ways around that as well.
Sucks css doesn't have native inheritance, though.
Unfortunately, CSS does not provide 'inheritance' in the way that programming languages like C++, C# or Java do. You can't declare a CSS class an then extend it with another CSS class.
However, you can apply more than a single class to an tag in your markup ... in which case there is a sophisticated set of rules that determine which actual styles will get applied by the browser.
<span class="styleA styleB"> ... </span>
CSS will look for all the styles that can be applied based on what your markup, and combine the CSS styles from those multiple rules together.
Typically, the styles are merged, but when conflicts arise, the later declared style will generally win (unless the !important attribute is specified on one of the styles, in which case that wins). Also, styles applied directly to an HTML element take precedence over CSS class styles.
Don't think of css classes as object oriented classes, think of them as merely a tool among other selectors to specify which attribute classes an html element is styled by. Think of everything between the braces as the attribute class, and selectors on the left-hand side tell the elements they select to inherit attributes from the attribute class. Example:
.foo, .bar { font-weight : bold; font-size : 2em; /* attribute class A */}
.foo { color : green; /* attribute class B */}
When an element is given the attribute class="foo", it is useful to think of it not as inheriting attributes from class .foo, but from attribute class A and attribute class B. I.e., the inheritance graph is one level deep, with elements deriving from attribute classes, and the selectors specifying where the edges go, and determining precedence when there are competing attributes (similar to method resolution order).
The practical implication for programming is this. Say you have the style sheet given above, and want to add a new class .baz, where it should have the same font-size as .foo. The naive solution would be this:
.foo, .bar { font-weight : bold; font-size : 2em; /* attribute class A */}
.foo { color : green; /* attribute class B */}
.baz { font-size : 2em; /* attribute class C, hidden dependency! */}
Any time I have to type something twice I get so mad! Not only do I have to write it twice, now I have no way of programatically indicating that .foo and .baz should have the same font-size, and I've created a hidden dependency! My above paradigm would suggest that I should abstract out the font-size attribute from attribute class A:
.foo, .bar, .baz { font-size : 2em; /* attribute base class for A */}
.foo, .bar { font-weight : bold; /* attribute class A */}
.foo { color : green; /* attribute class B */}
The main complaint here is that now I have to retype every selector from attribute class A again to specify that the elements they should select should also inherit attributes from attribute base class A. Still, the alternatives are to have to remember to edit every attribute class where there are hidden dependencies each time something changes, or to use a third party tool. The first option makes god laugh, the second makes me want to kill myself.
That's not possible in CSS.
The only thing supported in CSS is being more specific than another rule:
span { display:inline }
span.myclass { background: red }
A span with class "myclass" will have both properties.
Another way is by specifying two classes:
<div class="something else">...</div>
The style of "else" will override (or add) the style of "something"
As others have said, you can add multiple classes to an element.
But that's not really the point. I get your question about inheritance. The real point is that inheritance in CSS is done not through classes, but through element hierarchies. So to model inherited traits you need to apply them to different levels of elements in the DOM.
While direct inheritance isn't possible.
It is possible to use a class (or id) for a parent tag and then use CSS combinators to alter child tag behaviour from it's heirarchy.
p.test{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
p.test > span > span > span > span > span > span > span > span{background-color:rgba(55,55,55,0.1);}
<p class="test"><span>One <span>possible <span>solution <span>is <span>using <span>multiple <span>nested <span>tags</span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></p>
I wouldn't suggest using so many spans like the example, however it's just a proof of concept. There are still many bugs that can arise when trying to apply CSS in this manner. (For example altering text-decoration types).
I was looking for that like crazy too and I just figured it out by trying different things :P... Well you can do it like that:
composite.something, composite.else
{
blblalba
}
It suddenly worked for me :)
In specific circumstances you can do a "soft" inheritance:
.composite
{
display:inherit;
background:inherit;
}
.something { display:inline }
.else { background:red }
This only works if you are adding the .composite class to a child element. It is "soft" inheritance because any values not specified in .composite are not inherited obviously. Keep in mind it would still be less characters to simply write "inline" and "red" instead of "inherit".
Here is a list of properties and whether or not they do this automatically:
https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/propidx.html
Less and Sass are CSS pre-processors which extend CSS language in valuable ways. Just one of many improvements they offer is just the option you're looking for. There are some very good answers with Less and I will add Sass solution.
Sass has extend option which allows one class to be fully extended to another one. More about extend you can read in this article
I think this one is a better solution:
[class*=“button-“] {
/* base button properties */
}
.button-primary { ... }
.button-plain { ... }
Actually what you're asking for exists - however it's done as add-on modules. Check out this question on Better CSS in .NET for examples.
Check out Larsenal's answer on using LESS to get an idea of what these add-ons do.
CSS doesn't really do what you're asking. If you want to write rules with that composite idea in mind, you may want to check out compass. It's a stylesheet framework which looks similar to the already mentioned Less.
It lets you do mixins and all that good business.
For those who are not satisfied with the mentioned (excellent) posts, you can use your programming skills to make a variable (PHP or whichever) and have it store the multiple class names.
That's the best hack I could come up with.
<style>
.red { color: red; }
.bold { font-weight: bold; }
</style>
<? define('DANGERTEXT','red bold'); ?>
Then apply the global variable to the element you desire rather than the class names themselves
<span class="<?=DANGERTEXT?>"> Le Champion est Ici </span>
Have a look at CSS compose:
https://bambielli.com/til/2017-08-11-css-modules-composes/
according to them:
.serif-font {
font-family: Georgia, serif;
}
.display {
composes: serif-font;
font-size: 30px;
line-height: 35px;
}
I use it in my react project.
If you want a more powerful text preprocessor than LESS, check out PPWizard:
http://dennisbareis.com/ppwizard.htm
Warning the website is truly hideous and there's a small learning curve, but it's perfect for building both CSS and HTML code via macros. I've never understood why more web coders don't use it.
You can achieve what you want if you preprocess your .css files through php.
...
$something='color:red;'
$else='display:inline;';
echo '.something {'. $something .'}';
echo '.else {'. $something .'}';
echo '.somethingelse {'. $something .$else '}';
...

Including styles within another style

So I have been pondering about this and I don't think this exists. I also understand that my logic my be counter with what stylesheets are trying to accommodate, but let's give it a go:
Take the following example:
// Example "template style"
.blue_bold {
color: blue;
font-weight: bold;
/* other styles can go here */
}
So let's say I want to add that to my footer I would in my HTML go:
<div class="blue_bold" id="footer">
// Content goes here
</div>
This is perfect, but what if I want to add that element to a number of my elements. Say I want to add it to my navigation as well, I would then have to add that class to each element:
<div class="blue_bold" id="navigation">
// Content
</div>
....
<div class="blue_bold" id="footer">
// Content
</div>
My question is, as appose to declaring it via a class or style, is there no way to "attach" the style to another style within my stylesheet? (as example:)
#navigation, #footer {
attach_style(".blue_bold");
}
That way I can minimize my code by creating "base styles" and then attach those styles to individual styles within my stylesheet? This is again just a question, not something I wish to impliment, but I figure that given the above it would be a "nice to have" for people working with say brand guideline documents and want to attach specific styles to individual styles without going to the html to do it.
Any ideas? Does this exists?
You can't do it with pure CSS. You'll need to use LESS, or SASS/SCSS to generate your CSS.
Syntax examples here :
LESS
.blue_bold {
color: blue;
font-weight: bold;
}
#navigation,
#footer {
.blue_bold;
}
SCSS
.blue_bold {
color: blue;
font-weight: bold;
}
#navigation,
#footer {
#extend .blue_bold;
}
you will need to have a look on sass or less they are your best options.
sass here
less here
You can use sass or less but a more basic slight workaround is just to list the elements in your css like so:
#navigation,
#footer,
.some-other-element,
.another-element
{
// css styles go here that you want to apply to each element listed above
}
Can't see any benefits. What you're asking for is not a standard CSS.
You can define this for all elements with class blue_bold
.blue_bold {
color: blue;
font-weight: bold;
/* other styles can go here */
}
For this block
<div class="blue_bold" id="navigation"></div>
You can simply add another declaration like this:
#navigation, #footer {
background: black;
color: red;
}
Everything from .blue_bold will be used unless overwritten. What's wrong about it?

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