One thing you need to watch out for is the .ui-state-default
style.
I have buttons in a dialog box, that for some reason is getting the .ui-state-default
applied to them when a second dialog box is opened. I assume the dialog widget is trying to reset the state to default and this is applied to the buttons too.
Method 1:
Anyway I decided the easiest way was to put !important
on the style to prevent this default state (from the theme roller style) from taking precedence.
a.green-button
{
background-color:#FFFFFF !important;
border: 1px solid #132b14 !important;
color:#132b14 !important;
}
Method 2:
Alternatively you can apply the style like this, which will give this style more points without needing !important :
a.green-button, a.ui-state-default.green-button
{
background-color:#FFFFFF;
border: 1px solid #132b14;
color:#132b14;
}
This is the original css that is overwriting my style if I don't use !important
:
/* Interaction Cues
----------------------------------*/
.ui-state-highlight, .ui-widget-content .ui-state-highlight, .ui-widget-header .ui-state-highlight {border: 1px solid #fcefa1; background: #fbf9ee url(images/ui-bg_glass_55_fbf9ee_1x400.png) 50% 50% repeat-x; color: #363636; }