We’ve learned how to use CSS styles to format content on our webpage, and the code we’ve used is great for when you want to format all paragraphs, headers, or images. But what happens if you want to, say, distinguish among paragraphs on your page? Or break your page up into sections? That’s where divs, classes, and IDs come in handy.
Use IDs to distinguish among elements
I like the way my paragraphs look, but I want to create a special style for paragraphs I want to highlight. I can do this by adding an ID tag to those paragraphs. First, after the tag for the paragraph I want to highlight, I type id="highlight"
. Then I create a style for that ID tag on my stylesheet by typing #highlight
and entering styling information, just as I would for any element. The hashtag in front of “highlight” tells the browser that it refers to an ID tag.
Notice that when I refresh the page, the first paragraph is treated as before, since I haven’t labeled it “highlight.” The second paragraph, because of its ID tag, looks different.
Divide your page into sections with divs
The last step works well when you want to style individual elements. But what if you want to create sections on your page? Div tags come in handy for that. A div creates a new, invisible box around whatever elements it encloses, allowing you to style these elements as one block.
To label divs, use a class, which is just a way of naming an element. It’s very similar to an ID tag, except classes refer to elements that appear multiple times per page, while ID tags can be used only once. (In practice, this distinction is pretty blurry, but that’s the idea.)
Create a new div around part of your page and give it a class. Then style it on your stylesheet just as you did with the ID tag. The only difference is that instead of placing the hashtag in front of the div’s class, you’ll place a period in front of it, to indicate that it’s a class.
Get even crazier with floats
Floats can be kind of confusing, but the idea is that if you apply a float to an element, it’ll attempt to move in that direction, pushing all of its neighbors to the side. Try it by floating one of your divs left or right.
Taking precedence
We’re almost done, but there’s one last thing it’s important for you to know. What happens if you have contradictory styling information on your stylesheet? For example, what if you style your h1s one way at the top and another way toward the bottom? Try it.
The later style takes precedence.
Your browser can help you out
Right-click (or hold down control and click) somewhere on your webpage, and select Inspect Element. You’ll see something like the image above, which gives you information about how that element is styled. (In this case, I’ve clicked on my dog image.) You can actually style elements directly on the page by clicking on the style information. It won’t stick, though; the page will “reset” as soon as you refresh it.
Hey, you’re done! Nice work. If you have extra time, take a look at some of the more advanced ways you can use CSS (start with “Grouping and Nesting”).
Now that you’re a CSS pro, let’s publish your site to the web.