What Is CSS?
CSS (cascading stylesheets) is a simple mechanism for controlling
the style of a Web document without compromising its structure. By separating visual design elements (fonts, colors, margins,
and so on) from the structural logic of a Web page, CSS give Web designers the control they crave without sacrificing the
integrity of the data - thus maintaining its usability in multiple environments. In addition, defining typographic design
and page layout from within a single, distinct block of code - without having to resort to image maps, <font> tags,
tables, and spacer GIFs - allows for faster downloads, streamlined site maintenance, and instantaneous global control of design
attributes across multiple pages.
Client-side support for the various CSS properties is uneven, even
among browsers that support stylesheets. The CSS properties and values presented here are those supported by both Microsoft
Internet Explorer 4 and Netscape Navigator 4.
- How CSS Works
- Linking Stylesheets
- Units of Measure
- CSS-P (Position)
- Attributes
- CSS Properties
- CSS Examples