Stephen
Stephen

Reputation: 2540

What is the order of precedence for CSS?

I'm trying to figure out why one of my CSS classes seems to override the other (and not the other way around)?

Here I have two CSS classes:

.smallbox { 
    background-color: white;
    height: 75px;
    width: 150px;
    font-size:20px;
    box-shadow: 0 0 10px #ccc;
    font-family: inherit;
}

.smallbox-paysummary {
    @extend .smallbox; 
    font-size:10px;
}

and in my view I call:

<pre class = "span12 pre-scrollable smallbox-paysummary smallbox "> 

The font (the overlapping element) shows up as 10px instead of 20px - could someone explain why this is the case?

Upvotes: 208

Views: 270530

Answers (10)

A.Sai
A.Sai

Reputation: 1

Why are all the answers so Complicated ?

The ordering is as follows.

  1. Source Order

    1. Inline
    2. Internal
    3. External (Last Specificed CSS file)
  2. Important Keyword

  3. Specificity Score

    Score = Number of IDs + Number of Classes + Number of Elements.

Upvotes: 0

Safin Ghoghabori
Safin Ghoghabori

Reputation: 646

In a simple and short way, one should keep in mind the two things below:

  1. Inline CSS has a higher priority than embedded and external CSS.
  2. So final Order is: Value defined as Important > Inline > id nesting > id > class nesting > class > tag nesting > tag

Upvotes: 1

Qin
Qin

Reputation: 961

Here's a compilation of CSS styling order in a diagram, on which CSS rules has higher priority and take precedence over the rest: CSS styling order

Disclaimer: My team and I worked this piece out together with a blog post (https://vecta.io/blog/definitive-guide-to-css-styling-order) which I think will come in handy to all front-end developers.

Upvotes: 81

P. Avery
P. Avery

Reputation: 809

Also important to note is that when you have two styles on an HTML element with equal precedence, the browser will give precedence to the styles that were written to the DOM last ... so if in the DOM:

<html>
<head>
<style>.container-ext { width: 100%; }</style>
<style>.container { width: 50px; }</style>
</head>
<body>
<div class="container container-ext">Hello World</div>
</body>

...the width of the div will be 50px

Upvotes: 7

AMS777
AMS777

Reputation: 5919

What we are looking at here is called specificity as stated by Mozilla:

Specificity is the means by which browsers decide which CSS property values are the most relevant to an element and, therefore, will be applied. Specificity is based on the matching rules which are composed of different sorts of CSS selectors.

Specificity is a weight that is applied to a given CSS declaration, determined by the number of each selector type in the matching selector. When multiple declarations have equal specificity, the last declaration found in the CSS is applied to the element. Specificity only applies when the same element is targeted by multiple declarations. As per CSS rules, directly targeted elements will always take precedence over rules which an element inherits from its ancestor.

I like the 0-0-0 explanation at https://specifishity.com:

enter image description here

Quite descriptive the picture of the !important directive! But sometimes it's the only way to override the inline style attribute. So it's a best practice trying to avoid both.

Upvotes: 39

Lorenz Meyer
Lorenz Meyer

Reputation: 19895

There are several rules ( applied in this order ) :

  1. inline css ( html style attribute ) overrides css rules in style tag and css file
  2. a more specific selector takes precedence over a less specific one
  3. rules that appear later in the code override earlier rules if both have the same specificity.
  4. A css rule with !important always takes precedence.

In your case its rule 3 that applies.

Specificity for single selectors from highest to lowest:

  • ids (example: #main selects <div id="main">)
  • classes (ex.: .myclass), attribute selectors (ex.: [href=^https:]) and pseudo-classes (ex.: :hover)
  • elements (ex.: div) and pseudo-elements (ex.: ::before)

To compare the specificity of two combined selectors, compare the number of occurences of single selectors of each of the specificity groups above.

Example: compare #nav ul li a:hover to #nav ul li.active a::after

  • count the number of id selectors: there is one for each (#nav)
  • count the number of class selectors: there is one for each (:hover and .active)
  • count the number of element selectors: there are 3 (ul li a) for the first and 4 for the second (ul li a ::after), thus the second combined selector is more specific.

A good article about css selector specificity.

Upvotes: 329

Lucky Chaturvedi
Lucky Chaturvedi

Reputation: 91

Element, Pseudo Element: d = 1 – (0,0,0,1)
Class, Pseudo class, Attribute: c = 1 – (0,0,1,0)
Id: b = 1 – (0,1,0,0)
Inline Style: a = 1 – (1,0,0,0)

Inline css ( html style attribute ) overrides css rules in style tag and css file

A more specific selector takes precedence over a less specific one.

Rules that appear later in the code override earlier rules if both have the same specificity.

Upvotes: 4

freedeveloper
freedeveloper

Reputation: 4082

AS is state in W3: W3 Cascade CSS

the orden that different style sheet are applied is the following (quote from W3 cascading section):

  1. user agent declarations

  2. user normal declarations

  3. author normal declarations

  4. author important declarations

  5. user important declarations

More information about this in the referred W3 document

Upvotes: 5

Renato
Renato

Reputation: 983

First of all, based on your @extend directive, it seems you're not using pure CSS, but a preprocessor such as SASS os Stylus.

Now, when we talk about "order of precedence" in CSS, there is a general rule involved: whatever rules set after other rules (in a top-down fashion) are applied. In your case, just by specifying .smallbox after .smallbox-paysummary you would be able to change the precedence of your rules.

However, if you wanna go a bit further, I suggest this reading: CSS cascade W3C specification. You will find that the precedence of a rule is based on:

  1. The current media type;
  2. Importance;
  3. Origin;
  4. Specificity of the selector, and finally our well-known rule:
  5. Which one is latter specified.

Upvotes: 8

LifeQuery
LifeQuery

Reputation: 3282

The order in which the classes appear in the html element does not matter, what counts is the order in which the blocks appear in the style sheet.

In your case .smallbox-paysummary is defined after .smallbox hence the 10px precedence.

Upvotes: 14

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