When you create a web page, you need to decide what to write on (contents) and what it would look like (styles). For a simple web page, we normallly mix both contents and styles together in a single page. However, a typical website consists of hundreds or thousands of web pages. It is desirable to make the web pages look consistently (similar styles). The "mix" approach would be a nightmare for web developers if the website needs to change its "look" regularly. A better approach is to separate styles from contents. Define styles in a separate file and apply it to multiple web pages.
body { background-color:lightblue; font-family:Arial; }
The best way to learn CSS is to test out and to see web pages look like with different styles.
Best reference: www.w3schools.com
Class | Class Name | Class Time | Classroom |
---|---|---|---|
ENG1301 | Composition I | 9:30-10:35 | McFadden Building McF-205 |
CSC4341 | Database Management Systems | 10:40-11:45 | Science and Technology Building STC-111 |
PHY1401 | University Physics | 12:30-1:35 | McFadden Building PHY212 |
CIS3328 | Windows Server Administration | 1:40-2:45 | McFadden Building McF-101 |
Really? That is cool. Who write the code to program the robots?