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Learn how to style your text & fonts with the following CSS Properties:
#css
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#fancy text generator #fancy font #fancy text #fancy font generator #fancy text font #fancy text font generator
1650870267
In the previous chapters you've learnt how to select individual elements on a web page. But there are many occasions where you need to access a child, parent or ancestor element. See the JavaScript DOM nodes chapter to understand the logical relationships between the nodes in a DOM tree.
DOM node provides several properties and methods that allow you to navigate or traverse through the tree structure of the DOM and make changes very easily. In the following section we will learn how to navigate up, down, and sideways in the DOM tree using JavaScript.
You can use the firstChild
and lastChild
properties of the DOM node to access the first and last direct child node of a node, respectively. If the node doesn't have any child element, it returns null
.
<div id="main">
<h1 id="title">My Heading</h1>
<p id="hint"><span>This is some text.</span></p>
</div>
<script>
var main = document.getElementById("main");
console.log(main.firstChild.nodeName); // Prints: #text
var hint = document.getElementById("hint");
console.log(hint.firstChild.nodeName); // Prints: SPAN
</script>
Note: The
nodeName
is a read-only property that returns the name of the current node as a string. For example, it returns the tag name for element node,#text
for text node,#comment
for comment node,#document
for document node, and so on.
If you notice the above example, the nodeName
of the first-child node of the main DIV element returns #text instead of H1. Because, whitespace such as spaces, tabs, newlines, etc. are valid characters and they form #text nodes and become a part of the DOM tree. Therefore, since the <div>
tag contains a newline before the <h1>
tag, so it will create a #text node.
To avoid the issue with firstChild
and lastChild
returning #text or #comment nodes, you could alternatively use the firstElementChild
and lastElementChild
properties to return only the first and last element node, respectively. But, it will not work in IE 9 and earlier.
<div id="main">
<h1 id="title">My Heading</h1>
<p id="hint"><span>This is some text.</span></p>
</div>
<script>
var main = document.getElementById("main");
alert(main.firstElementChild.nodeName); // Outputs: H1
main.firstElementChild.style.color = "red";
var hint = document.getElementById("hint");
alert(hint.firstElementChild.nodeName); // Outputs: SPAN
hint.firstElementChild.style.color = "blue";
</script>
Similarly, you can use the childNodes
property to access all child nodes of a given element, where the first child node is assigned index 0. Here's an example:
<div id="main">
<h1 id="title">My Heading</h1>
<p id="hint"><span>This is some text.</span></p>
</div>
<script>
var main = document.getElementById("main");
// First check that the element has child nodes
if(main.hasChildNodes()) {
var nodes = main.childNodes;
// Loop through node list and display node name
for(var i = 0; i < nodes.length; i++) {
alert(nodes[i].nodeName);
}
}
</script>
The childNodes
returns all child nodes, including non-element nodes like text and comment nodes. To get a collection of only elements, use children
property instead.
<div id="main">
<h1 id="title">My Heading</h1>
<p id="hint"><span>This is some text.</span></p>
</div>
<script>
var main = document.getElementById("main");
// First check that the element has child nodes
if(main.hasChildNodes()) {
var nodes = main.children;
// Loop through node list and display node name
for(var i = 0; i < nodes.length; i++) {
alert(nodes[i].nodeName);
}
}
</script>
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The other day one of our students asked about possibility of having a CSS cheatsheet to help to decide on the best suited approach when doing this or that layout.
This evolved into the idea of making a visual CSS cheatsheet with all (most) of the common patterns we see everyday and one of the best possible conceptual implementation for them.
In the end any layout could and should be split into parts/blocks and we see every block separately.
Here is our first take on that and we would be happy to keep extending it to help us all.
Please, send you suggestions in the comments in community or via gitlab for the repeated CSS patterns with your favourite implementation for that so that we will all together make this as useful as it can be.
#css #css3 #cascading-style-sheets #web-development #html-css #css-grids #learning-css #html-css-basics
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1617940200
In this tutorial, we are going to learn:
backdrop-filter
to style some frost/blur style on background.#css #css animation #css / style sheets #css animations #css background