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Introduction to CSS Part II
Introduction to CSS Part II
Font Styling 2/2
Now that we have gone over some of the basic font-styling properties in CSS, there are some still left over, which we will go over now as they provide some precise styling to text and may be needed in some situations.
font-variant
The font-variant
property in CSS allows you to specify whether the text should be displayed in a small-caps
variant or the normal
font variant. The syntax for the font-variant
property is:
small-caps
text uses capital letters slightly smaller than the normal
capital letters and is often used for headings or subheadings.
Here's an example of how you might use the font-variant property to display text in a small-caps
variant:
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line-height
The line-height
property in CSS allows you to specify the distance between lines of text. The syntax for the line-height
property is:
You can specify the line-height
using CSS length units (such as pixels
, ems
, or percentages
). For example, to set the line-height
for a paragraph element to 1.5 times the font-size
, you would use the following code:
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font
The font
property in CSS is a shorthand property that allows you to specify several font-related properties in a single declaration. The syntax for the font
property is:
The font-style
, font-variant
, font-weight
, font-size
, and line-height
properties are optional and can be left out if the default values are desired. The font-family
property is required.
Here's an example of how you might use the font
property to specify the font for a paragraph element:
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index
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This would set the font-style
to italic, the font-variant
to small-caps
, the font-weight
to bold, the font-size
to 16 pixels, the line-height
to 1.5, and the font-family
to Arial as a first choice and sans-serif
as a fallback.
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