Explanation
There are multiple things in play (as usual…), but the important order for you is this:
- styles with highest specificity are used
- if more have the same specificty, the latest is used
Order of selectors [and/or usage of css, for completness] (and what they add to specificity value is):
- tag
- class
- id
- inline styles (via
style=""
)
!important
- tag +
!important
- class +
!important
- id +
!important
- inline styles +
!important
There were tests which showed that 256
classes on one element/selector have higher specificity then id. But in real life, you'll mostly (if you ever do CSS 'right') deal with number of classes + position in css file (you shouldn't style with #id, as it gives you no advantage over classes, and tags are mostly used only for generic styles)
Read more about specificity here: http://coding.smashingmagazine.com/2007/07/27/css-specificity-things-you-should-know/
Example
HTML:
<div id="johnny" class="walker whisky"> -- </div>
CSS:
/* example one */
div { border-color: red; } // border is red
.whisky { border-color: brown; } // now it's brown
#johnny { border-color: black; } // now it's black
div#johnny { border-color: red; } // it's red again
.walker { border-color: green !important; } // it's green
/* example two */
.whisky {border-color: brown; }
.whisky.walker {border-color: green; }
/* green */
/* example two */
.whisky.walker {border-color: brown; }
.whisky {border-color: green !important; }
/* green */
Hope this helps.
1×id
=255×class
, i.e.256×class
trumps oneid
– codepen.io/chriscoyier/pen/lzjqh