Cascading style sheets (CSS) is the presentation language for web content. The World Wide Web Consortium maintains the CSS standard.
Explore our CSS docs CSS selectorsA reference guide to all the CSS selectors available.
At-rulesA reference guide to the different CSS @rules (at-rules) available.
Media queriesA reference guide to the different types of available media query.
Note: If you are completely new to web development, you may want to review Web development for beginners.
BackgroundCascading Style Sheets (CSS) is a language that applies presentation (styling, layout, animation) to markup content (such as HTML, XHTML, SVG or XML). It is one of the main components of the Open Web Platform.
CSS allows you to style your content through a set of selectors and properties.
CSS development is handled by the CSS working group. To find out more, including how to participate, go to the CSS working group home page. For providing feedback and asking questions related to contributing to specs, a good place is the www-style mailing list. Bear in mind that it is not a suitable place for “how do I use CSS to style my web page” type questions. A list of all CSS properties can be found here CSS3 properties Reference
Contributing to the CSS reference pagesAs CSS continues to evolve, we’ll continue to improve the docs. Currently, we’re working on CSS properties. To join that project, see WPD/CSS_property_guide.
Index of all CSS topicsThe list of CSS properties, below, only includes W3C Recommended values or candidate/proposed recommendations. Use the Special:PrefixIndex/css/ search page to find all articles organized under this page, or the CSS category page for all CSS-related pages in the wiki.
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