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Getting Started with Cascading Style Sheets
Part 4 – Background Colour
In part three we looked at
how style sheets can be used to enhance the level of control you
have over text both in terms of typeface as well as fine
positioning. In this part we’ll be concentrating on the background
options that add new flexibility to your page designs.
There is a lot of duplication with existing HTML
tags and you may want to choose to work with only CSS properties or
a mix of the two. As there is more you can do with the CSS
properties, you will probably want to stick with those where
possible.
As an example, with an HTML table, you’d need to
specify the colour for every cell but by using a CSS definition for
a cell, you’d only need to specify the background colour once saving
greatly on download times for your page.
Color
The Color property, not
surprisingly, lets you assign a colour to
any element. Colour can be expressed in one of three ways. The
easiest is probably by using the common names e.g. red, blue etc.
You can also use hex values such as #FC0000 or RGB values using the
notation rgb(xxx,xxx,xxx) where the xxx’s represent red, green and
blue numeric values. An example of this would be rgb(55,80,126).
You can also use intensity percentages of each RGB colour –
rgb(100%, 50%, 66%). Examples are:
H1 {
color:blue }
H1 { color:#000080
}
H1 {
color:rgb(30,200,70) }
Background-Color
Background-color can take colour values in the same
way as Color above. However, the background-color property also lets
you specify the word ‘transparent’ as a colour. Whereas the HTML
background tag applies to the whole screen, this property only
applies to a particular element such as a title or paragraph.
BODY { background-color:#FF4444 }
Background-Image
Background-image lets you specify a graphic file
that will be used as a background for an element. This can easily
look messy so this tag should be used with care if you intend having
a text displayed over a busy looking image. The image might even
obscure the text completely.
If your background image only applies to a few
elements you should either include a plain background of a similar
colour to be used behind the rest of the page or use the background-color
property to specify a colour that is harmonious with the images
used.
The background image can be specified as either a
full URL such as http://www.mysite.com/background.gif or relative
URL such as /images/background.gif.
H1 {
background-image: /images/background.gif }
Background-Repeat
This useful property controls how background images
are repeated on screen. You can either have an image repeat
horizontally only, vertically only or all over the screen like a
normal HTML background image. Acceptable values are repeat,
repeat-x, repeat-y or no-repeat. You would usually use this in
conjunction with the background-image property as follows:
BODY {
background-image /images/background.gif;
background-repeat: repeat-x }
Background-Attachment
The background-attachment property determines if a
background image stays at a fixed position on the page or scrolls
with the text. Suitable values are ‘scroll’ and ‘fixed’. Netscape
Navigator version 4 doesn’t support this feature so be aware that
not everyone will get the correct results when viewing your pages.
BODY {
background-attachment: fixed }
Background-Position
This powerful property lets you specify the position
of a specified background image. This is another feature not
supported by Netscape Navigator 4. There are several options for
this property. The easiest is by using the keywords left, right,
center, top, centre and bottom. You can also use percentages and
lengths if required. In the case of percentages you could quote the
x then y positions of the image relative to the element they are
related to. An example explains this better.
BODY {
background-image: /images/background.gif;
background-position: 20% 30% }
In this case, the image background.gif is positioned
20% of the way across the BODY and 30% of the way down.
You can also quote the position in lengths such as
50px for 50 pixels in. However, due to the differences in different
systems display resolutions, it is usually recommended to avoid this
method and stick with percentages if at all possible.
Lengths and percentages can be combined so 20% 50px
would be acceptable. You cannot mix lengths with keywords so 20%
bottom wouldn’t be valid.
Background
Background is the shorthand property that lets you
combine all the other properties in to one statement. An example
might be:
P {
background: #c00 url(fire.jpg) no-repeat bottom right }
Which would set the paragraph background to an image
called fire.jpg. The rest of the background would be red (#c00) and
the image would be non-repeating and positioned at the bottom right
hand side of the paragraph.
That wraps things up for background colour. In
part five we’ll be looking at what you can do to enhance how
hyperlinks look and behave along with a brief look at classes.
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