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Introduction to CSS Part II
Introduction to CSS Part II
Text Special Effects
Now that we have looked into how text is styled and positioned and what properties are used, we will move on to some miscellaneous decorative properties that can be used in niche scenarios or for stylistic/design purposes.
text-decoration
CSS's text-decoration
property allows you to specify the text's decorations (such as underlines, overlines, or strikethroughs). The syntax for the text-decoration
property is:
The none
value specifies that the text should not have any decorations, the underline
value adds an underline to the text, the overline
value adds an overline to the text, the line-through
value adds a strikethrough to the text, and the blink
value makes the text blink (although this value is not widely supported and is not recommended for use).
Here's an example of how you might use the text-decoration property to add an underline to a paragraph:
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text-transform
The text-transform
property in CSS allows you to specify the capitalization of the text. The syntax for the text-transform
property is:
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text-shadow
The text-shadow
property in CSS allows you to add a shadow effect to the text. The syntax for the text-shadow property is:
The horizontal-offset
and vertical-offset
values specify the distance of the shadow from the text, the blur-radius
value specifies the amount of blur to apply to the shadow, and the color
value specifies the color of the shadow.
Here's an example of how you might use the text-shadow property to add a red shadow with a horizontal offset of 2 pixels and a vertical offset of 1 pixel to a heading element:
You can also specify multiple shadows by separating them with a comma. For example, the following code will add a blue shadow with a horizontal offset
of -2 pixels and a vertical offset
of -1 pixel, as well as a red shadow with a horizontal offset
of 2 pixels and a vertical offset
of 1 pixel.
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