There are four keywords that are valid values for any CSS property (see the title). Of those, day to day, I’d say I see the inherit
used the most. Perhaps because it’s been around the longest (I think?) but also because it makes logical sense (“please inherit your value from the next parent up that sets it”). You might see that with an override of a link color, for example.
<footer>
©2012 Website — <a href="/contact">Contact</a>
</footer>
/* General site styles */
a {
color: blue;
}
footer {
color: white;
}
footer a {
color: inherit;
}
That’s a decent and elegant way to handle the fact that you want the text and links in the footer to be the same color without having to set it twice.
The others behave differently though…
initial
will reset the property back to the spec default.unset
is weird as heck. For a property that is inherited (e.g.color
) it meansinherit
, and for a property that isn’t inherited (e.g.float
) it meansinitial
. That’s a brain twister for me such that I’ve never used it.revert
is similarly weird. Same deal for inherited properties, it meansinherit
. But for non-inherited properties it means to revert to the UA stylesheet. Kinnnnnda useful in that revertingdisplay
, for example, won’t make a<p>
elementdisplay: inline;
but it will remain a sensibledisplay: block;
.
PPK covered all this in more detail.
I’m glad he found my whining about all this:
Chris Coyier argues we need a new value which he calls
default
. It reverts to the browser style sheet in all cases, even for inherited properties. Thus it is a stronger version ofrevert
. I agree. This keyword would be actually useful.
Amen. We have four properties for fiddling with the cascade on individual properties, but none that allow us to blast everything back to the UA stylesheet defaults. If we had that, we’d have a very powerful tool for starting fresh with styles on any given element. In one sense: scoped styles!
PPK has a fifth value he thinks would be useful: cascade
. The idea (I suppose) is it kinda acts like currentColor
except for any property. Sort of like a free variable you don’t have to define that gives you access to what the cascaded value would have been, except you’re going to use it in some other context (like a calculation).
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