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HTML Images; CSS Color & Text

Images

Adding Images

src

This tells the browser where it can find the image file. This will usually be a relative URL pointing to an image on your own site. (Here you can see that the images are in a child folder called images — relative URLs were covered on pages 83-84).

alt

This provides a text description of the image which describes the image if you cannot see it.

title

You can also use the title attribute with the <img> element to provide additional information about the image. Most browsers will display the content of this attribute in a tootip when the user hovers over the image.

The text used in the alt attribute is often referred to as alt text. It should give an accurate description of the image content so it can be understood by screen reader software (used by people with visual impairments) and search engines.

If the image is just to make a page look more attractive (and it has no meaning, such as a graphic dividing line), then the alt attribute should still be used but the quotes should be left empty.

Height & Width of Images

This specifies the height of the image in pixels.

This specifies the width of the image in pixels. Images often take longer to load than the HTML code that makes up the rest of the page. It is, therefore, a good idea to specify the size of the image so that the browser can render the rest of the text on the page while leaving the right amount of space for the image that is still loading.

Aligning Images Horizontally

The align attribute was commonly used to indicate how the other parts of a page should flow around an image. It has been removed from HTML5 and new websites should use CSS to control the alignment of images I have discussed it here because you are likely to come across it if you look at older code, and because some visual editors still insert this attribute when you indicate how an image should be aligned. The align attribute can take these horizontal values:

left

This aligns the image to the left (allowing text to flow around its right-hand side).

right

This aligns the image to the right (allowing text to flow around its left-hand side).

top

This aligns the first line of the surrounding text with the top of the image.

middle

This aligns the first line of the surrounding text with the middle of the image.

bottom

This aligns the first line of the surrounding text with the bottom of the image.

Three Rules for Creating Images

  1. Save images in the right format
  1. Save images at the right size
  1. Use the correct resolution

Fi gure and Fi gure Caption

<figure>

Images often come with captions. HTML5 has introduced a new <figure> element to contain images and their caption so that the two are associated. You can have more than one image inside the <figure> element as long as they all share the same caption.

<figcaption>

The <figcaption> element has been added to HTML5 in order to allow web page authors to add a caption to an image. Before these elements were created there was no way to associate an <img> element with its caption. Older browsers that do not understand HTML5 elements simply ignore the new elements and display the content of them.

Color

Foreground Color

The color property allows you to specify the color of text inside an element. You can specify any color in CSS in one of three ways:

These express colors in terms of how much red, green and blue are used to make it up. For example: rgb(100,100,90)

These are six-digit codes that represent the amount of red, green and blue in a color, preceded by a pound or hash # sign. For example: #ee3e80

There are 147 predefined color names that are recognized by browsers. For example: DarkCyan We look at these three different ways of specifying colors on the next double-page spread. CSS3 has also introduced another way to specify colors called HSLA,

Foreground Color color Above each CSS rule in this example you can see how CSS allows you to add comments to your CSS files. Anything between the /* symbols and the */ symbols will not be interpreted by the browser.

They are shown in grey above. The use of comments can help you to understand a CSS file (and organise it, by splitting a long document into sections). Here, we have used comments to indicate which method is used to specify each of the different types of colors.

CSS treats each HTML element as if it appears in a box, and the background-color property sets the color of the background for that box. You can specify your choice of background color in the same three ways you can specify foreground colors: RGB values, hex codes, and color names.

If you do not specify a background color, then the background is transparent. By default, most browser windows have a white background, but browser users can set a background color for their windows, so if you want to be sure that the background is white you can use the background-color property on the <body> element.

CSS3 introduces the opacity property which allows you to specify the opacity of an element and any of its child elements. The value is a number between 0.0 and 1.0 (so a value of 0.5 is 50% opacity and 0.15 is 15% opacity).

The CSS3 rgba property allows you to specify a color, just like you would with an RGB value, but adds a fourth value to indicate opacity. This value is known as an alpha value and is a number between 0.0 and 1.0 (so a value of 0.5 is 50% opacity and 0.15 is 15% opacity). The rgba value will only affect the element on which it is applied (not child elements).

Because some browsers will not recognize RGBA colors, you can offer a fallback so that they display a solid color. If there are two rules that apply to the same element, the latter of the two will take priority. To create the fallback, you can specify a color as a hex code, color name or RGB value, followed by the rule that specifies an RGBA value.

If the browser understands RGBA colors it will use that rule. If it doesn’t, it will use the RGB value.

Text

Specifying Typefaces

The font-family property allows you to specify the typeface that should be used for any text inside the element(s) to which a CSS rule applies. The value of this property is the name of the typeface you want to use.

The people who are visiting your site need the typeface you have specified installed on their computer in order for it to be displayed.

You can specify a list of fonts separated by commas so that, if the user does not have your first choice of typeface installed, the browser can try to use an alternative font from the list.

Size of Type

The font-size property enables you to specify a size for the font. There are several ways to specify the size of a font. The most common are:

👉Pixels

Pixels are commonly used because they allow web designers very precise control over how much space their text takes up. The number of pixels is followed by the letters px.

👉percentages

The default size of text in browsers is 16px. So a size of 75% would be the equivalent of 12px, and 200% would be 32px. If you create a rule to make all text inside the <body> element to be 75% of the default size (to make it 12px), and then specify another rule that indicates the content of an element inside the <body> element should be 75% size, it will be 9px (75% of the 12px font size).

👉ems

An em is equivalent to the width of a letter m.

18pt
24pt

36pt

48pt

60pt

72pt Type Scales

You may have noticed that programs such as Word, Photoshop and InDesign offer the same sizes of text.

text-align

The text-align property allows you to control the alignment of text. The property can take one of four values:

This indicates that the text should be left-aligned.

This indicates that the text should be right-aligned. center This allows you to center text.

This indicates that every line in a paragraph, except the last line, should be set to take up the full width of the containing box.

Summary *TEXT*