Web Standards Guide
The University of Adelaide Australia
Web Standards Home
Conditions of Use
Content style guide
Plan your site
Maintain your site
Using Server Side Includes
Using style sheets
Using headings
Using tables
Set up email address for enquiries
Upload your pages
Extend your site
Visual Identity [External link]
Contact us

Online Media Unit
Level 7, Old Classics Wing
THE UNIVERSITY OF ADELAIDE
SA 5005
AUSTRALIA
Email


Telephone:
+61 8 8303 3280
Facsimile:
+61 8 8303 4829

Using style sheets

What is a style sheet?

A style sheet is used to apply a formatting style for a block of text. It has the advantage that several HTML tags such as BOLD and FONT can be combined to form a single style, called an HTML style. The style can be saved to be used again to apply the same formatting to other blocks of text within the webpage. This saves time and makes it easier to create webpages that have a consistent style. HTML styles are supported by all browsers, and you can update pages through a browser.

Why use style sheets?

Style sheets make webpages easier to maintain and the pages themselves will look more consistent. This consistency in the University's web presence is significant in projecting the University as a unified entity comprising many parts rather than a collection of disparate elements.

Style sheets are an important way of separating the actual content of a webpage from the appearance of the content. This allows the content of a webpage to be updated without affecting the appearance of the appearance and vice versa.

The Online Media Unit has done extensive work on a set of global stylesheets that ensure that web content looks consistent across different browsers and platforms. A special javascript chooser in the header of each file is used to detect the browser and platform requesting each page and provides the appropriate stylesheet to display the page. These global stylesheets have a range of standard headings and styles available for use within webpages.

The table below shows the globally defined styles available for use in University webpages created using the University web templates:

Style Name Used For Example
subhead Sub Headings Web Information & Standards Guide
footer Page Footers
caption Captions Web Information & Standards Guide
breadcrumb Bread crumbs
secnav Secondary Navigation (normal) Web Information & Standards Guide
secnavb Secondary Navigation (bold) Web Information & Standards Guide
secnav2 Secondary Navigation (small) Web Information & Standards Guide
secnav2b Secondary Navigation (small bold) Web Information & Standards Guide
secnav3 Secondary Navigation (v. small) Web Information & Standards Guide

Applying these styles to HTML

To apply the styles in a HTML page, use the class attribute. First open the webpage in the text editing area of your HTML editor. In the HTML tag of the text you want to format, use the class attribute with the appropriate style from the table above. For example:

<a href="some_file.html" class="secnav">Visit Some File</a>
<p class="footer">
<td class="caption">Here is a caption</td>