When coming to write your business website, HTML is probably one of the first things you will think of. This is the basic language of the internet and therefore one of the primary languages of website building. Whilst the internet was relatively young, HTML determined not only the structure of websites but also how they looked to the viewer. Tags like <font>, <h1>, and <h2> would decide how big the writing was, where the titles were and what the writing itself looked like. In December 1996, a new opportunity arose. CSS was developed by the World Wide Web Consortium and changed the way that web pages could be presented to an audience.
CSS is designed primarily to enable the separation of document content (written in HTML or a similar markup language) from document presentation, including elements such as the layout, colors, and fonts.[1] This separation can improve content accessibility, provide more flexibility and control in the specification of presentation characteristics, enable multiple pages to share formatting, and reduce complexity and repetition in the structural content (such as by allowing for tableless web design). CSS can also allow the same markup page to be presented in different styles for different rendering methods, such as on-screen, in print, by voice (when read out by a speech-based browser or screen reader) and on Braille-based, tactile devices. It can also be used to allow the web page to display differently depending on the screen size or device on which it is being viewed. While the author of a document typically links that document to a CSS style sheet, readers can use a different style sheet, perhaps one on their own computer, to override the one the author has specified.
CSS specifies a priority scheme to determine which style rules apply if more than one rule matches against a particular element. In this so-called cascade, priorities or weights are calculated and assigned to rules, so that the results are predictable.
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