CSS3 isn't the future, it's the present, and is ripe for the pickin' and is ready to respond to display your sites in multiple devices right now. Presented at Rich Web Experience 2011, Ft. Lauderdale, FL.
Apidays New York 2024 - Scaling API-first by Ian Reasor and Radu Cotescu, Adobe
CSS3: Ripe and Ready
1. CSS3: Ripe & Ready!
Denise Jacobs //
1 Rich Web Experience // December 1, 2011
2. Sweet Tweets
Who I am:
@denisejacobs
This fine event:
#rwx2011 @nofluff
What I’m talkin’ ‘bout:
#css3ripe
2
3. A little about me
Denise R. Jacobs is an author, speaker,
design thinker, and educator. She is
the author of The CSS Detective
Guide, and is a co-author for InterAct
with Web Standards: A Holistic
Approach to Web Design. She is a
Consultant Web Design Trainer and
Creativity Evangelist based in Miami,
Florida.
3 CSSDetectiveGuide.com & InterActWithWebStandards.com
8. Start here…
1. Know Your CSS3
• Getting started
• What’s new
• Rules of the road
• Helping tools and scripts
• Properties
• Standard effects
• Advanced effects
• Selectors
8
10. What’s New in CSS3?
CSS3 is the third generation of the CSS
specification recommendations from the
W3C.
In CSS3 there are new selectors, pseudo-
elements and classes, properties, and
values specifically created to answer the
needs and solve the problems of modern
web design and development.
10
11. CSS3 Modularity
CSS3 has been broken up into different
unique modules. This means is that, for
example, the particular CSS properties and
values for layout is grouped into one
specific module.
11
12. CSS3 Modularity: Benefits
• Browser producers can now implement
CSS3 module by module
• Speeds up the browser implementation
process
• Encourages innovation
12
13. The CSS3 Modules
• Template Layout • Values and Units
• Backgrounds and Borders • Web Fonts
• Ruby • Behavioral Extensions to CSS
• Basic User Interface • Line Layout
• Basic Box Model • Flexible Box Layout
• Grid Positioning • Image Values
• Speech • 2D Transformations
• Marquee • Multi-column Layout
• Style Attribute Syntax • 3D Transformations
• Cascading and Inheritance • Namespaces
• Color • Transitions
• Fonts • Animations
• Text • View Module
• Generated Content for Paged • Media Queries
Media • Paged Media
• Generated and Replaced • Selectors
Content
13
14. Resources: New in CSS3
http://www.w3.org/TR/tr-groups-all#
tr_Cascading_Style_Sheets__CSS__
Working_Group
14
15. Colors in CSS3: RGB
• Regular RGB
rgb(x, x, x):
ex. rgb(255, 0, 0)
• RBG with alpha-opacity
rgba(x, x, x, y):
An RGB value
ex. rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.2)
15
16. RGBA Color
Alpha opacity:
0.0 = 0% = no opacity
1.0 = 100% = full opacity
16
17. Colors in CSS3: HSL
HSL stands for hue, saturation, and
luminosity (lightness)
• Regular HSL
hsl(x%, x%, x%):
ex. hsl(0, 100%, 50%)
• HSL with alpha-opacity
hsla(x%, x%, x%, y):
ex. hsla(0, 100%, 50%, 0.5)
17
18. HSL Color Wheel
0º – Red
60º – Yellow
120º – Green
180º – Cyan
240º – Blue
300º – Magenta
18
19. HSL Color Picker Tool
http://www.workwithcolor.com/hsl-color-picker-01.htm
19
22. The Scoop
• Many properties are browser-specific,
requiring vendor prefixes
• Plus there is a standard property
• There are syntax differences between
browser-specific properties and the
standard property
• All of this causes an increase in the amount
of CSS
22
26. IE9 now supports CSS3
…But still not as fully as
the other browsers
yet.
26
27. Resources: IE9 CSS3 support
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-
us/ie/ff468705.aspx#_Web_standards_sup
port
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-
us/library/cc351024%28v=vs.85%29.aspx
http://www.impressivewebs.com/css3-
support-ie9/
27
28. Tools you’ll need:
1. CSS3 Property browser support charts
2. CSS3 Selector browser support charts
3. CSS3 Specifications
4. All browsers to test in and/or
cross-browser testers
28
30. CSS3 Selector browser support charts
http://www.standardista.com/css3/
css3-selector-browser-support
30
31. The CSS3 Specifications
The CSS3 Specifications are THE resource for
finding out exactly is the intented behavior
and use of any given property.
http://www.w3.org/standards/techs/
css#w3c_all
31
36. How can we achieve compatibility?
36 http://www.flickr.com/photos/barretthall/205175534/
37. Steps to get as close as possible
1. Leverage source order
2. Filter it
3. Let tools do all of the work
37
38. Leverage source order
• Place default properties first
• Place browser-specific properties ahead of
standard properties
• The standard properties will override the
vendor’s when the standard is established.
38
40. A Proper Stack
.gradient {
color: #fff;
background: #aaaaaa url(gradient_slice.jpg) 0 0
x-repeat; /*fallback background color & image*/
40
41. A Proper Stack
.gradient {
color: #fff;
background: #aaaaaa url(gradient_slice.jpg) 0 0
x-repeat; /*fallback background color & image*/
background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(top,
#07407c, #aaaaaa); /* gradient for Mozilla */
41
42. A Proper Stack
.gradient {
color: #fff;
background: #aaaaaa url(gradient_slice.jpg) 0 0
x-repeat; /*fallback background color & image*/
background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(top,
#07407c, #aaaaaa); /* gradient for Mozilla */
background-image: -webkit-gradient(linear,left
top,left bottom,color-stop(0, #07407c),color-
stop(1, #aaaaaa)); /* gradient for the Webkits
*/
42
43. A Proper Stack
.gradient {
color: #fff;
background: #aaaaaa url(gradient_slice.jpg) 0 0
x-repeat; /*fallback background color & image*/
background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(top,
#07407c, #aaaaaa); /* gradient for Mozilla */
background-image: -webkit-gradient(linear,left
top,left bottom,color-stop(0, #07407c),color-
stop(1, #aaaaaa)); /* gradient for the Webkits
*/
-ms-filter:
"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(sta
rtColorStr='#07407c', EndColorStr='#aaaaaa')";
/* filter for IE8 (& IE9) */
43
44. A Proper Stack
.gradient {
color: #fff;
background: #aaaaaa url(gradient_slice.jpg) 0 0
x-repeat; /*fallback background color & image*/
background-image: -moz-linear-gradient(top,
#07407c, #aaaaaa); /* gradient for Mozilla */
background-image: -webkit-gradient(linear,left
top,left bottom,color-stop(0, #07407c),color-
stop(1, #aaaaaa)); /* gradient for the Webkits
*/
-ms-filter:
"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(sta
rtColorStr='#07407c', EndColorStr='#aaaaaa')";
/* filter for IE8 (& IE9) */
filter:
progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(star
tColorStr='#07407c', EndColorStr='#aaaaaa');
} /* filter for IE7 and lower */
44
45. Apply a Filter
• If you must have the effect in IE lt 8, such as alpha
opacity, gradient, shadow, transitions etc. you
could use a proprietary IE filter.
• The -ms-filter attribute is an extension to CSS.
This syntax will allow other CSS parsers to skip the
value of this unknown property completely and
safely. It also avoids future name clashes with other
CSS parsers.
• In IE 8 mode, filters must be prefixed with "-ms-"
and the PROGID must be in single or double quotes
to make sure IE 8 renders the filters properly.
45
46. Filters: {Caveat Coder}
• IE filters work, but are essentially hacks
– IE filters are proprietary and thus not part of
any standard specification, and never will be
46
47. Resources: IE Filters
Microsoft Visual Filters and Transitions Reference
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/
ms532853%28v=VS.85%29.aspx
47
48. Let the tools do the work
• We’ll talk about those next!
48
58. Get a helping hand…
These scripts help IE lt 8 behave like CSS3-
compliant browsers. However, support of
CSS3 properties varies between scripts.
58
64. What does Modernizr do?
Modernizr detects which CSS3 (and HTML5)
properties are supported by the browser,
and appends classes to the <html> tag,
which then allows you to create styles to
target specific properties to individual
browsers.
It is a premier progressive enhancement
tool!
64
65. How to use Modernizr
http://www.alistapart.com/articles/taking-
advantage-of-html5-and-css3-with-
modernizr/
http://webdesignernotebook.com/css/
how-to-use-modernizr
http://www.ericlightbody.com/2010/
modernizr-your-tool-for-html5-and-css3-
functionality/
65
71. @font-face
• Note:
– Actually part of the CSS2.1 specification.
– Therefore, the IEs do support it!
• Tips & issues
– When you decide to use a font as a webfont,
you have to be sure that the EULA supports it.
– One way to avoid that is to use ONLY fonts
that are listed as approved webfonts.
• Browser Support
– IE lt 8 require fonts to be in EOT format
– IE9 now supports WOFF
71
72. @font-face bug: IE lt 8
@font-face super bullet-proofing
The problem:
@font-face doesn’t work, even with the
proper normal syntax. What gives?
72
73. @font-face bug: Webkit
@font-face bold and italics “bug”
The problem:
Applying font-weight:bold or font-
style: italic to @font-face'd text doesn’t
work.
73
75. Graceful degradation: @font-face
• Desired font should display in all
browsers. If not, fallback fonts will
display
• Extra credit: image replacement
through conditional comments
75
78. Webfont Services
Instead of generating the webfonts yourself,
you can pay a service where the webfonts
are hosted elsewhere, and you link to them
and use the fonts on their server.
78
82. Google Font API
Method 1: Head Link
<link
href='http://fonts.googleapis.com/css?f
amily=IM+Fell+DW+Pica' rel='stylesheet'
type='text/css'>
#headline h1 {
text-align: center;
font-size: 8em;
color: #111;
text-shadow: 0px 2px 3px #555;
font-family: 'IM Fell DW Pica', arial,
serif;
}
That’s it! Just two copy and paste actions and you’ve got
82 yourself a fancy new webfont.
83. Google Font API
Method 2: @Import
@import
url(http://fonts.googleapis.com/cs
s?family=Inconsolata);
Simply paste this into the very top of your CSS page,
then copy the font-family CSS snippet and paste.
83
90. border-radius
• Tips & issues
– Different syntax for mozilla, webkit, and
opera browsers
• Browser Support
– IE lt 8 does not support, IE9 does
90
91. border-radius
Syntax comparison breakdown:
• -moz allows multiple values for each position
• -webkit individual values
91
• Standard is like mozilla
92. border-radius
#contentcolumn {
-moz-border-radius: 20px 20px 0 0;
-webkit-border-top-left-radius: 20px;
-webkit-border-top-right-radius: 20px;
border-radius: 20px 20px 0 0;
}
92
99. rgba
• Tips & issues
– More granular control of the color
opacity of a particular element
• Browser Support
– IE lt 8 does not support, IE9 does
– There is an IE filter that will give
transparency with a color.
99
100. Cross-browser: rgba
• Place after regular rgb color property to
override in modern browsers; older
browsers will ignore it
• IE lt 8 bug: use the property background
instead of background-color for the
regular color
100
102. Full solution: rgba
.rgba {
background-color: #ff0000;
/* fallback color in hexidecimal. */
background-color: transparent; /* transparent
is key for the filter to work in IE8. best
done through conditional comments */
background-color: rgba(255, 0, 0, 0.3);
-ms-filter:
"progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient
(startColorstr=#4CFF0000,
endColorstr=#4CFF0000)";
/* filter for IE8 */
filter:
progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient(
startColorstr=#4CFF0000,
endColorstr=#4CFF0000);
/* filter for older IEs */
}
102
105. box-shadow
• Tips & issues
– Different syntax for mozilla, webkit, and
opera browsers
• Browser Support
– IE lt 8 does not support, IE9 does
– There is a filter for IE: shadow (actually
there are 2: shadow and dropshadow,
but shadow is said to be better)
105
106. box-shadow
.portfolio {
-moz-box-shadow: 0 5px 20px
rgba(0,0,0,0.6);
-webkit-box-shadow: 0 5px 20px
rgba(0,0,0,0.6);
box-shadow: 0 5px 20px rgba(0,0,0,0.6);
}
106
108. Graceful degradation: box-shadow
• Okay if users don’t see effect, doesn’t
affect usability of the page.
• However, there is a filter for IE: shadow
(actually there are 2: dropshadow as well,
but shadow is said to be better)
• Extra credit: serve images through
conditional comments if you didn’t want to
use the filter.
108
113. text-shadow
• Tips & issues
– Can help accentuate text and improve
readability and visual importance
• Browser Support
– IE lt 8 does not support, nor does IE9 :/
– could use the IE filter: shadow
113
114. Graceful degradation: text-shadow
• If it doesn’t show up, that’s okay
• No impact on accessibility
• However, there is an IE filter: shadow.
• Extra credit: image replacement
114
122. gradient
• Tips & issues
– Very different syntax for mozilla and
webkit browsers previously
– Newer syntax for current and future
browsers
• Browser Support
– IE does not support, so will still need a
fallback image for those browsers
122
135. border-image
Borders can now be created using images
and sections thereof for enhanced visual
design.
• Tips & issues
– Documentation on best use is sparse
– No adequate fall-back techniques for graceful
degradation
– Vendor prefixes for Mozilla and webkit
• Browser support
135
– The IEs do not support
140. Multiple backgrounds
• Tips & issues:
– The backgrounds are shown according to the
order listed, with the first background image
listed is the one “on top” and the rest stack
underneath it.
– Can use CSS3 gradients (which are like
background images) in conjunction with
multiple background images.
• Browser support:
– IE lt 8 does not support, but IE9 does
140
144. background-size
You can set the size of a background image and
make sure it covers the entire background of a
page, no matter what the size.
• Tips & Issues:
– Vendor prefixes for mozilla, webkit, and opera
• Browser support:
– IE lt 8 does not support, but IE9 does
144
145. background-size values
contain
• Scales the image, while preserving its
intrinsic aspect ratio (if any), to the largest
size such that both its width and its height
can fit inside the background positioning
area.
Contain always fits the entire image within
your viewport, leaving opaque borders on
either the top-bottom or the left-right
whenever the ratio of the background
image and browser window are not the
145
146. background-size values
cover
• Scales the image, while preserving its intrinsic
aspect ratio (if any), to the smallest size such that
both its width and its height can completely cover
the background positioning area.
Cover always fills the browser window. You can
control how your image is aligned within the
viewport by using the background-position
property.
146
147. background-size
Example:
body { background: #000
url(myBackground_1280x960.jpg) center
center fixed no-repeat;
-moz-background-size: cover;
-webkit-background-size: cover;
-o-background-size: cover;
background-size: cover;
}
147
151. masks
• Masks allow you to overlay the content of a
box with a pattern that can be used to
knock out portions of that box in the final
display.
• Masks work ONLY in Webkit browsers.
• You can use other images, gradients, and
151
153. masks
Example code:
Using an image
<img src="kate.png" style="-webkit-
mask-box-image: url(mask.png) 75
stretch;">
Using a gradient
<img src="kate.png" style="-webkit-
mask-image: -webkit-
gradient(linear, left top, left
bottom, from(rgba(0,0,0,1)),
to(rgba(0,0,0,0)))">
153
156. box-reflect
• A reflection is a replica of the original
object with its own specific transform and
mask.
• Reflections will update automatically as the
source changes. If you hover over links,
you’ll see the hover effect happen in the
reflection.
• The reflection will have no effect on layout
(other than being part of a container’s
156
overflow)
157. box-reflect: syntax
Syntax:
-webkit-box-reflect: <direction> <offset>
<mask-box-image>
<direction> can be one of above, below, left or right.
<offset> is a length or percentage that specifies the distance
of the reflection from the edge of the original border box
(using the direction specified). It can be omitted, in which
case it defaults to 0.
<mask-box-image> is a mask-box-image that can be used to
overlay the reflection. If omitted, the reflection has no
mask.
157
158. box-reflect
Example:
<img src="bubbles.jpg"
style="border:5px solid white;
-webkit-box-reflect:below 5px;
-webkit-gradient(linear, left top,
left bottom, from(transparent),
color-stop(0.5, transparent),
to(white));">
158
161. Multiple text columns
You can have one div containing a number of
paragraphs which can be displayed in columns,
with no float or height manipulations.
• Tips & Issues:
– Some of the properties are not widely
supported, and many of the related (like
dividers, breakers, etc.) haven’t been
implemented or aren’t supported yet either.
161
169. transform
• Tips & issues
– Mozilla, Webkit, and Opera vendor
prefixes; no standard yet.
• Browser Support
– IE lt 8 does not support, but IE9 does
169
170. 2D Transformations
Different kinds of transforms:
• rotate
• scale
• skew
• translate
• matrix
170
171. Transform: graceful degradation
• Leave images/elements in standard
orientation or shape
• There is an IE filter: matrix.
• Extra credit: serve images or image sprites
with conditional comments
171
180. transition
You can create subtle transitions between
hover states on elements. The transitions
smooth out visual jumps.
• Tips & issues
– Be sure to put the transition effect on the
correct element
180
181. transition
Example:
#id_of_element {
-webkit-transition: all 1s ease-in-out;
-moz-transition: all 1s ease-in-out;
-o-transition: all 1s ease-in-out;
transition: all 1s ease-in-out;
}
181
183. Animation
You can create subtle animations in the
browser!
• Tips & issues:
– Plan out the animation sequence ahead of
time
– Be aware of style order in the CSS
183
184. Animation
div {
animation-name: diagonal-slide;
animation-duration: 5s;
animation-iteration-count: 10;
}
@keyframes diagonal-slide {
from { left: 0; top: 0; }
to { left: 100px; top: 100px; }
}
184
187. CSS3 Selectors
Advanced selectors give us the power to
target elements that are not part of the
document tree and/or those that are
generated dynamically.
• Tips & issues
– There are a lot of options to choose from!
– Great to use for progressive enhancement
– Need to be aware of changes to specificity
187
189. The Hierarchy “Family Tree”
• An ancestor is any element that is connected to other elements but is
higher up the document tree, no matter how many levels up. For
example, in the document above, both the <html> and <body> tags are
ancestors of the <p> tag.
• A descendant is any element connected to an ancestor, but lower in
the document tree, no matter how many levels down. In our example,
the <em>, <a>, and <img> are descendants of the <body> tag.
• A parent is an element directly above a connected element in the
document tree. A parent element is also an ancestor, but an element
can have ancestors that are not its parents.
• A child element is directly below a connected element. A child is a
descendant, but an element can have descendants that are not its
children.
• Sibling elements share the same parent, and are on the same level as
each other in the hierarchy.
189
193. Combinator Selectors: General Sibling
A general sibling selector (also known as adjacent)
selects an element that shares the same parent as
another element in the document tree.
Syntax:
sibling selector ~ sibling selector
{property: value; }
E ~ F
Example:
p ~ dd {font-family: Georgia,
193 serif;}
194. Combinator Selectors: Attribute presence
selector[attribute="value"] targets a selector with a
particular attribute and specific value.
Example:
img[src=“catchathief.jpg”] {border:
1px solid #999; }
selector [attribute~="value"] targets a selector with
a particular attribute and value where the value is
one of multiple values separated by a space.
Example
img[alt~="CSI"] {border: 1px
#ff8000 solid;}
194
195. Combinator Selectors: Attribute presence
selector [attribute|="value"] targets an element
with an attribute that contains values separated
by a hypen in a list.
Example:
img[title|="large"] {border: 1px
solid #000; }
195
196. Combinator Selectors: Attribute substrings
selector [attribute^="value"] targets an element
with an attribute that begins with a prefix of
“value”.
Example:
img[title^=“th_"] { border: 1px
solid #000; }
selector [attribute$="value"] targets an element
with an attribute which ends with a suffix of
“value.”
Example:
img[title$=“png"] { border: 1px
196 solid #000; }
197. Combinator Selectors: Attribute substrings
selector [attribute*="value"] targets an element
with an attribute that contains “value” as any
part of a value string.
Example:
img[title*="large"] {border: 1px
solid #000; }
197
198. Lab Time
Let’s apply the general sibling and attribute
selectors to our page.
Let’s see how we can make the page look
exactly the same but with the new CSS3
selectors.
198
203. The :nth-child() pseudo-class
The :nth-child() pseudo-class targets an
element that has a certain number of
siblings before it in the document tree. This
argument, which is placed within the
parentheses, can be a number, a keyword,
or a formula.
A number x matches the x-th child.
Example:
• p:nth-child(3) { color:#f00;
203 }
204. The :nth-child() pseudo-class
The keywords odd and even can be used to match
child elements whose index is odd or even. The
index of an element’s first child is 1, so this rule
will match any p element that is the first, third,
fifth, and so on, child of its parent element.
Example:
p:nth-child(odd) { color:#f00; }
The formula an + b can be used to create more
complex repeating patterns. In the formula, a
represents a cycle size, n is a counter starting at
0, and b represents an offset value. All values are
integers.
Example:
204
p:nth-child(3n+1) { color:#f00; }
205. The :nth-last-child() pseudo-class
The :nth-last-child() pseudo-class works just like the
:nth-child() pseudo-class, except that it targets an
element that has a certain number of siblings
after it in the document tree.
In other words, it starts counting from the last child
instead of the first, and counts backwards.
Example:
tr:nth-last-child(2) {
background:#ff0;}
205
206. The :nth-of-type() pseudo-class
The :nth-of-type() pseudo-class works exactly
like the :nth-child() pseudo-class, but only
counts those elements that are of the same
type as the element the rule is applied to.
Example:
p:nth-of-type(3) {
background:#ff0;}
206
207. The :nth-last-of-type() pseudo-class
The :nth-last-of-type() pseudo-class targets
an element that has a certain number of
siblings of the same element type after it in
the document tree.
Just like the :nth-last-child() pseudo-class, it
starts counting from the last child instead
of the first, and counts backwards.
Example:
p:nth-last-of-
207 type(2){background:#ff0;}
208. The :last-child pseudo-class
The :last-child pseudo-class targets an
element that is the last child of its parent
element.
It is the same as :nth-last-child(1).
Example:
p:last-child {background:#ff0;}
208
209. The :first-of-type pseudo-class
The :first-of-type pseudo-class targets an
element that is the first sibling of its type.
it is the same as :nth-of-type(1).
Example:
p:first-of-type {
background:#ff0;}
209
210. The :last-of-type pseudo-class
The :last-of-type pseudo-class targets an
element that is the last sibling of its type. it
is the same as :nth-last-of-type(1).
Example
p:last-of-
type{background:#ff0;}
210
211. The :only-of-type pseudo-class
The :only-of-type pseudo-class targets an
element whose parent element has no
other children of the same element type.
It is the same (but with a lower specificity) as
:first-of-type :last-of-type or :nth-of-
type(1):nth-last-of-type(1).
Example:
p:only-of-
type{background:#ff0;}
211
212. The :only-child pseudo-class
The :only-child pseudo-class targets an
element whose parent element has no
other element children.
It is the same (but with a lower specificity) as
:first-child:last-child or :nth-child(1):nth-
last-child(1).
Example:
p:only-child {background:#ff0;}
212
213. Lab Time
Let’s apply the CSS3 pseudo-classes selectors
to our page.
Let’s see how we can make the page look
exactly the same but with the new CSS3
selectors.
213
215. The :root pseudo-class
The :root pseudo-class targets the
document’s root element. In HTML, the
root element is always the HTML element.
:root actually has a higher specificity than
html.
Example:
:root { background:#ff0; }
215
216. Pseudo-class: Negation
:not targets all elements that are not
indicated. A very useful pseudo-class.
Example:
*:not(img) {text-align: left;}
(This would match all elements except
images.)
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217. Pseudo-class: Target
:target targets the target of a url on a page –
most often used for fragment identifiers.
Example:
div.window:target {
opacity: 1;
z-index: 7;
}
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219. Pseudo-elements: State
The :enabled and :disabled pseudo-classes
allow developers to specify the
appearance of user interface elements
(form controls) that are enabled or
disabled, provided that the browser
allows styling of form controls.
Example:
input[type="text"]:enabled {
background:#ffc; }
input[type="text"]:disabled {
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background:#ddd; }
220. The :checked pseudo-class
The :checked pseudo-class allows developers
to specify the appearance of checked radio
and checkbox elements. Again, this is
provided that the browser allows styling of
form controls.
Example:
input:checked {border:1px solid
#090;}
220
229. This is just the beginning!
My Delicious links are HUGE compendia of all
things related to CSS3, updated as I find
new articles, resources and tools!
http://delicious.com/denisejacobs/css3
http://delicious.com/denisejacobs/
css3training
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