Some time ago, font tags offered a web developer’s only ways of editing HTML content for appearance of web explorers for instance Microsoft Internet Explorer, Opera or Firefox.
The issue with such tags was these fonts were not only disreputably untrustworthy for providing any known type of details in the way originally proposed by its creator. They also increased file sizes to about unendurable proportions. Moreover, the content size setting of explorer might create a page’s matter overlap or turn into badly written in some additional
Not so long ago, font tags (which are evil) provided a web designer’s only means of formatting an HTML document’s text for presentation within web browsers such as Microsoft Internet Explorer™, Opera™ or Mozilla Firefox.
The trouble with font tags was that they were not only notoriously unreliable for presenting any given piece of information in the way initially intended by its author; they also bloated file sizes to almost insupportable proportions. In fact, even the text size setting of a browser could make a page’s content overlap or
CSS is a technical specification that defines the syntax for how a set of styles should be encoded as well as the semantics of the codes.
However, you are not required to know the technical specification to make use of Cascading Style Sheets. For example, the Cascade CSS editor makes it possible to design a style sheet using dialogs instead of editing the raw text which describes the styles.
This tutorial provides an overview of Cascading Style Sheets without going into all the technical details required for manual editing of CSS.
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