Introduction
Styles are a newer way to format your text and colors in HTML. They are now the correct way to format instead of using tags like basefont, font, center, b, i, u,
and s
, an attributes like align, bgcolor
, and color
.
Using Style as an Attribute
The style
attribute is used in many tags including: headings, paragraphs, and the body tag. Instead of using <body bgcolor="#0000ff">
to set the page background color to be blue, we will now use this: <body style="background-color:#0000ff">
. We still use the equal sign to begin with everything that it is equaled to in quotations. We now use the – between words, and : for what this is set to.
Proper Syntax of Styles: <tag style="property:value">
Using Multiple Styles
Multiple styles can be used in each tag if desired. However you can not write the attribute style more than once. Instead type ; at the end (before the end quote) and add the second property (without using spaces). For example: <p style="font-family:arial;color:#ffffff">
Example 1 |
<html> <head> <title>My Web Page</title> </head> <body style="background-color:#aaaaff"> <h1 style="text-align:center">My New Heading</h1> <p style="font-family:arial;color:#ff0000">This is my red text.</p> <p style="font-family:arial;color:#ff0000;font-size:20px">This is my big red text.</p> </body> </html> |
Let’s look at Example 1. The <h1 style="text-align:center">
tells the level-1 heading to be centered.
Practice:
|
Other Properties
Many other properties of styles exsist and now replace all the older ways to format your text and tables. Bold is now: <tag style="font-weight:bold">
. There are variations of the vaule you can add, such as: normal, bolder, bold, lighter. A full list of Properites are available at: HTML Dog’s Website