Is it possible to use 2 CSS classes that have the same name for the selectors, etc. in the same HTML file? If so, how do you differentiate between the two when styling elements?

link|improve this question

feedback

5 Answers

up vote 10 down vote accepted

Yes this is possible, simply include two css files in the HEAD section of the document. Any styles set in the first will be overwritten in the second, so say you have this:
First file:

 #something{
  background-color: #F00;
  color: #FFF;
 }

And then in the second file:

 #something{
  background-color: #000;
 }

Then the background color for #something will be overwritten in the second file to black but the color will stay the same since the second file doesn't say anything about it.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Yes it is possible. The definitions in second file will overwrite the definitions of the first file. There is no way to differentiate between the two but to prepend the class names according to the file.

link|improve this answer
feedback

...that have similar names for the selectors

If the names really are similar and not identical then there shouldn't be a problem.

link|improve this answer
Assume they are identical. – Xaisoft Dec 16 '08 at 20:52
I've edited the question to reflect this. – John Topley Dec 16 '08 at 20:54
Well, then the overwrite answers that you already have are the right answer. – EBGreen Dec 16 '08 at 20:56
feedback

do you mean 2 definitions for the same class? or 2 class names on an element?

The first case, no.

<style>
  .foo{
    border:1px solid blue;
    color:red;
  }
  .foo{
    border:4px solid orange;
  }
</style>
<div class="foo">this will have an orange border and red text (no blue border)</div>

The second case, yes

<div class="class1 class2">this is valid</div>
link|improve this answer
2 similar class names in 2 separate files. – Xaisoft Dec 16 '08 at 20:51
Well, true. But, misleading. Each new definition expands/overrides the last. The "foo" div will still have red text. – Jonathan Lonowski Dec 16 '08 at 20:53
Ah my bad, my code sample didn't match my thought. Xaisoft: if the names are different, then you are totally fine, you can do whatever you want. The only issue is if the names are the exact same. – scunliffe Dec 17 '08 at 1:51
feedback

This should work, try it.

<style>
  .foo{
    border:1px solid blue;
    color:red;
  }
  .foo{
    border:4px solid orange !important;
  }
</style>
<div class="foo">this will have an orange border and red text (no blue border)</div>
link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.