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i would like to know if it's good practice to use inline CSS styles to manipulate bootstrap elements:

for example:

<img src="swim-2.jpg" height="400" width="400" alt="swimmingClass" class="img-thumbnail img-responsive" style="margin-top:10%;transform:rotate(-10deg);">

but i have a few images and div blocks where i use inline styles to change padding and position. is it bad coding practice?

3
  • 1
    Are you doing this for specificity reasons?
    – sma
    Jul 22, 2015 at 19:51
  • This is an opinion based question, you should re-word it. Jul 22, 2015 at 19:53
  • @sma i am trying to align elements to my liking. but while doing so i do not want to divert too far from industry standards on good coding practice. Jul 22, 2015 at 19:59

3 Answers 3

1

Avoid using inline styles.

Create a new file custom.css. Refer/Load it after Bootstrap.css

<link rel="stylesheet" href="path/to/bootstrap.css"> 
<link rel="stylesheet" href="path/to/custom.css">

Add a custom class to the element.

HTML

<img src="swim-2.jpg" height="400" width="400" alt="swimmingClass" class="img-thumbnail img-responsive transform">

CSS

/* custom.css */
.transform {
  margin-top: 10%;
  transform: rotate(-10deg);
}
1
  • No problem. Good luck! :)
    – m4n0
    Jul 22, 2015 at 20:06
1

You shouldn't really use inline styling. It will be a pain if you ever have to change any of it. If you use that style on each image you would have to update each image to match. The point of CSS is to separate the presentation from the structure, using a custom css file is the way to go.

0

You should really never use inline-styling. The HTML is not a "do'er" it is just "idle". So you trying to make HTML do things like styles etc would not really be the most effective coding. Besides that it just looks plain messy.

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