Q1. In the following example, which selector has the highest specificity ranking for selecting the anchor link element?
ul li a
a
.example a
div a
-
.example a
-
div a
-
a
-
ul li a
-
a[title]{...}
-
a > title {...}
-
a.title {...}
-
a=title {...}
Q3. CSS grid and flexbox are now becoming a more popular way to create page layouts. However, floats are still commonly used, especially when working with an older code base, or if you need to support older browser version. What are two valid techniques used to clear floats?
- Use the "clearfix hack" on the floated element and add a float to the parent element.
- Use the overflow property on the floated element or the "clearfix hack" on either the floated or parent element.
- Use the "clearfix hack" on the floated element or the overflow property on the parent element.
- Use the "clearfix hack" on the parent element or use the overflow property with a value other than "visible."
1) .nav {
...;
}
2) nav {
...;
}
3) #nav {
...;
}
-
1. An element with an ID of "nav" 2. A nav element 3. An element with a class of "nav"
-
They all target the same nav element.
-
1. An element with an class of "nav" 2. A nav element 3. An element with a id of "nav"
-
1. An element with an class of "nav" 2. A nav element 3. An div with a id of "nav"
Q5. When adding transparency styles, what is the difference between using the opacity property versus the background property with an rgba()
value?
- Opacity specifies the level of transparency of the child elements. Background with an
rgba()
value applies transparency to the background color only. - Opacity applies transparency to the background color only. Background with an
rgba()
value specifies the level of transparency of an element, as a whole, including its content. - Opacity specifies the level of transparency of an element, including its content. Background with an
rgba()
value applies transparency to the background color only. - Opacity applies transparency to the parent and child elements. Background with an
rgba()
value specifies the level of transparency of the parent element only.
Q6. What is true of block and inline elements? (Alternative: Which statement about block and inline elements is true?)
- By default, block elements are the same height and width as the content container between their tags; inline elements span the entire width of its container.
- By default, block elements span the entire width of its container; inline elements are the same height and width as the content contained between their tags.
- A
<nav>
element is an example of an inline element.<header>
is an example of a block element. - A
<span>
is an example of a block element.<div>
is an example of an inline element.
Q7. CSS grid introduced a new length unit, fr, to create flexible grid tracks. Referring to the code sample below, what will the widths of the three columns be?
.grid {
display: grid;
width: 500px;
grid-template-columns: 50px 1fr 2fr;
}
- The first column will have a width of 50px. The second column will be 50px wide and the third column will be 100px wide.
- The first column will have a width of 50px. The second column will be 150px wide and the third column will be 300px wide.
- The first column will have a width of 50px. The second column will be 300px wide and the third column will be 150px wide.
- The first column will have a width of 50px. The second column will be 500px wide and the third column will be 1000px wide.
- to control the height of the space between two lines of content
- to control the height of the space between heading elements
- to control the height of the character size
- to control the width of the space between characters
- Multiple classes can be used within the same element.
- The same class can be used multiple times per page.
- Class selectors with a leading period
- Classes can be used multiple times per page but not within the same element.
Q10. There are many properties that can be used to align elements and create page layouts such as float, position, flexbox and grid. Of these four properties, which one should be used to align a global navigation bar which stays fixed at the top of the page?
- position
- flexbox
- grid
- float
background: blue url(image.jpg) no-repeat scroll 0px 0px;
-
background-color: blue; background-image: url(image.jpg); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-attachment: scroll; background-position: 0px 0px;
-
background-color: blue; background-img: url(image.jpg); background-position: no-repeat; background-scroll: scroll; background-size: 0px 0px;
-
background-color: blue; background-src: url(image.jpg); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-wrap: scroll; background-position: 0px 0px;
-
background-color: blue; background-src: url(image.jpg); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-scroll: scroll; background-position: 0px 0px;
Q12. In the following example, according to cascading and specificity rules, what color will the link be?
.example {
color: yellow;
}
ul li a {
color: blue;
}
ul a {
color: green;
}
a {
color: red;
}
<ul>
<li><a href="#" class="example">link</a></li>
<li>list item</li>
<li>list item</li>
</ul>
- green
- yellow
- blue
- red
Q13. When elements overlap, they are ordered on the z-axis (i.e., which element covers another). The z-index property can be used to specify the z-order of overlapping elements. Which set of statements about the z-index property are true?
- Larger z-index values appear on top of elements with a lower z-index value. Negative and positive numbers can be used. z-index can only be used on positioned elements.
- Smaller z-index values appear on top of elements with a larger z-index value. Negative and positive numbers can be used. z-index must also be used with positioned elements.
- Larger z-index values appear on top of elements with a lower z-index value. Only positive numbers can be used. z-index must also be used with positioned elements.
- Smaller z-index values appear on top of elements with a larger z-index value. Negative and positive numbers can be used. z-index can be used with or without positioned elements.
line-height: 20px;
line-height: 2;
- The value of 20px will set the line-height to 20px. The value of 2 will set the line-height to twice the size of the corresponding font-size value.
- The value of 20px will set the line-height to 20px. The value of 2 is not valid.
- The value of 20px will set the line-height to 20px. The value of 2 will default to a value of 2px.
- The value of 20px will set the line-height to 20px. The value of 2 will set the line-height to 20% of the corresponding font-size value.
Q15. In the following example, what color will paragraph one and paragraph two be? (Alternative: In this example, what color will paragraphs one and two be?)
<section>
<p>paragraph one</p>
</section>
<p>paragraph two</p>
section p {
color: red;
}
section + p {
color: blue;
}
- Paragraph one will be blue, paragraph two will be red.
- Both paragraphs will be blue.
- Paragraphs one will be red, paragraph two will be blue.
- Both paragraphs will be red.
-
1. External; CSS is written in a separate file. 2. Inline; CSS is added to the <head> of the HTML page. 3. Internal; CSS is included within the HTML tags.
-
1. External; CSS is written in a separate file and is linked within the <header> element of the HTML file. 2. Inline; CSS is added to the HTML tag. 3. Internal; CSS is included within the <header> element of the HTML file.
-
1. External; CSS is written in a separate file and is linked within the <head> element of the HTML file. 2. Internal; CSS is included within the <header> element of the HTML file. 3. Inline; CSS is added to the HTML tag.
-
1. External; CSS is written in a separate file and is linked within the <head> element of the HTML file. 2. Inline; CSS is added to the HTML tag. 3. Internal; CSS is included within the <head> element of the HTML file.
Q17. Which of the following is true of the SVG image format? (Alternative: Which statement about the SVG image format is true?)
- CSS can be applied to SVGs but JavaScript cannot be.
- SVGs work best for creating 3D graphics.
- SVGs can be created as a vector graphic or coded using SVG specific elements such as <svg>, <line>, and <ellipse>.
- SVGs are a HAML-based markup language for creating vector graphics.
a:active {
color: pink;
}
- The color of the link will display as pink after its been clicked or if the mouse is hovering over the link.
- The color of the link will display as pink on mouse hover.
- The color of the link will display as pink while the link is being clicked but before the mouse click is released.
- The color of the link will display as pink before it has been clicked.
- Use background-fill to set the color inside the object and stroke or border to set the color of the border.
- The color cannot be changed with CSS.
- Use fill or background to set the color inside the object and stroke to set the color of the border.
- Use fill to set the color inside the object and stroke to set the color of the border.
- the closest element with position: relative
- the viewport
- the parent element
- the wrapper element
- only if the background-repeat property is set to repeat
- indefinitely, vertically, and horizontally
- indefinitely on the horizontal axis only
- once, on the x and y axis
Q22. When using media queries, media types are used to target a device category. Which choice lists current valid media types?
- print, screen, aural
- print, screen, television
- print, screen, speech
- print, speech, device
- p::first-letter { color: red; }
- p:first-letter { color: red; }
- first-letter::p { color: red; }
- first-letter:p { color: red; }
p {
color: #000000;
}
-
"p" is the selector "#000000" is the property "color" is the value
-
"p" is the selector "color" is the property "#000000" is the value
-
"color" is the selector "#000000" is the property "#p" is the value
-
"color" is the selector "p" is the property "#000000" is the value
- The rem unit is relative to the font-size of the p element.
- You have to set the value for the rem unit by writing a declaration such as rem { font-size: 1 Spx; }
- The rem unit is relative to the font-size of the containing (parent) element.
- The rem unit is relative to the font-size of the root element of the page.
-
corner-radius: 10px;
-
border-corner: 10px;
-
corner-curve: 10px;
-
border-radius: 10px;
@media (min-width: 1024px), screen and (orientation: landscape) { … }
- The rule will apply to a device that has either a width of 1024px or wider, or is a screen device in landscape mode.
- The rule will apply to a device that has a width of 1024px or narrower and is a screen device in landscape mode.
- The rule will apply to a device that has a width of 1024px or wider and is a screen device in landscape mode.
- The rule will apply to a device that has a width of 1024px or narrower, or is a screen device in landscape mode.
Q28. CSS transform properties are used to change the shape and position of the selected objects. The transform-origin property specifies the location of the element's transformation origin. By default, what is the location of the origin?
- the top left corner of the element
- the center of the element
- the top right corner of the element
- the bottom left of the element
Q29. Which of the following is not a valid color value? (Alternative: Which choice is not a valid color value?)
-
color: #000
-
color: rgb(0,0,0)
-
color: #000000
-
color: 000000
<div style="margin-bottom: 2rem;">Div 1</div>
<div style="margin-top: 2rem;">Div 2</div>
- 2rem
- 32px
- 64px
- 4rem
Q31. When using the Flexbox method, what property and value is used to display flex items in a column?
- flex-flow: column; or flex-direction: column
- flex-flow: column;
- flex-column: auto;
- flex-direction: column;
- any declarations in user-agent stylesheets
- important declarations in user stylesheets
- normal declarations in author stylesheets
- important declarations in author stylesheets
Q33. The flex-direction property is used to specify the direction that flex items are displayed. What are the values used to specify the direction of the items in the following examples?
-
- Example 1:
flex-direction: row;
- Example 2:
flex-direction: row-reverse;
- Example 3:
flex-direction: column;
- Example 4:
flex-direction: column-reverse;
- Example 1:
-
- Example 1:
flex-direction: row-reverse;
- Example 2:
flex-direction: row;
- Example 3:
flex-direction: column-reverse;
- Example 4:
flex-direction: column;
- Example 1:
-
- Example 1:
flex-direction: row;
- Example 2:
flex-direction: row-reverse;
- Example 3:
flex-direction: column;
- Example 4:
flex-direction: reverse-column;
- Example 1:
-
- Example 1:
flex-direction: column;
- Example 2:
flex-direction: column-reverse;
- Example 3:
flex-direction: row;
- Example 4:
flex-direction: row-reverse;
- Example 1:
Note: Examples seem to be missing.
Q34. There are two sibling combinators that can be used to select elements contained within the same parent element; the general sibling combinator (~) and the adjacent sibling combinator (+). Referring to example below, which elements will the styles be applied to?
h2 ~ p {
color: blue;
}
h2 + p {
background: beige;
}
<section>
<p>paragraph 1</p>
<h2>Heading</h2>
<p>paragraph 2</p>
<p>paragraph 3</p>
</section>
- Paragraphs 2 and 3 will be blue. The h2 and paragraph 2 will have a beige background.
- Paragraphs 2, and 3 will be blue, and paragraph 2 will have a beige background.
- Paragraph 2 will be blue. Paragraphs 2 and 3 will have a beige background.
Q35. When using flexbox, the "justify-content" property can be used to distribute the space between the flex items along the main axis. Which value should be used to evenly distribute the flex items within the container shown below?
- justify-content: space-around;
- justify-content: center;
- justify-content: auto;
- justify-content: space-between;
- Icon fonts increase accessibility.
- Icon fonts can be used to replace custom fonts.
- Icon fonts can be styled with typography related properties such as font-size and color.
- Icon fonts are also web safe fonts.
Q37. What is the difference between display:none
and visibility:hidden
?
- Both will hide the element on the page, but display:none has greater browser support. visibility:hidden is a new property and does not have the best browser support
- display:none hides the elements but maintains the space it previously occupied. visibility:hidden will hide the element from view and remove it from the normal flow of the document
- display:none hides the element from view and removes it from the normal flow of the document. visibility:hidden will hide the element but maintains the space it previously occupied.
- There is no difference; both will hide the element on the page
- element:hover {scale: 0.5;}
- element:hover {transform: scale(0.5);}
- element:hover {scale: 50%;}
- element:hover {transform: scale(50%);}
- Icon fonts can be inserted only using JavaScript.
- Icon fonts are inserted as inline images.
- Icon fonts require browser extensions.
- Icon fonts can be styled with typography-related properties such as font-size and color.
Q40. The values for the font-weight property can be keywords or numbers. For each numbered value below, what is the associated keyword?
font-weight: 400;
font-weight: 700;
- bold; normal
- normal; bold
- light; normal
- normal; bolder
Q41. If the width of the container is 500 pixels, what would the width of the three columns be in this layout?
.grid { display: grid; grid-template-columns: 50px 1fr 2fr; }
- 50px, 150px, 300px
- 50px, 200px, 300px
- 50px, 100px, 200px
- 50px, 50px, 100px
Note: an alternative for Q7.
Q42. Using the :nth-child pseudo class, what would be the most efficient way to style every third item in a list, no matter how many items are present, starting with item 2?
-
li:nth-child(3 + 2n) { margin: 0 5 px; }
-
li:nth-child(3n + 2) { margin: 0 5 px; }
-
li:nth-child(2), li:nth-child(5), li:nth-child(8) { margin: 0 5 px; }
-
li:nth-child(2n + 3) { margin: 0 5 px; }
-
a[href="#"] {...}
-
a[href~="#"]
-
a[href^="#"]
-
a[href="#"]
- Only one class value can be assigned to an element.
- An element can have multiple class value.
- Class selectors are marked with a leading period.
- More than one element can have the same class value.
- Margin adds space around and inside of an element; padding adds space only inside of an element.
- Margin adds space around an element; padding adds space inside of an element.
- Margin adds a line around an element, padding adds space inside of an element.
- Margin adds space inside of an element, padding adds space around an element.
Q46. What is not a valid way of declaring a padding value of 10 pixels on the top and bottom, and 0 pixels on the left and right?
- padding: 10px 10px 0px 0px;
- padding: 10px 0px;
- padding: 10px 0;
- padding: 10px 0px 10px 0px;
@font-face {
font-family: 'Avenir', sans-serif;
src: url('avenir.woff2') format('woff2'), url('avenir.woff') format('woff');
}
- The font file formats are not supported in modern browsers.
- The src attribute requires a comma between the URL and format values.
- There are no errors in the example.
- The sans-serif inclusion is problematic.
- position: absolute;
- display: flex;
- display: block;
- float: left;
Q49. The calc() CSS function is often used for calculating relative values. In the example below, what is the specified margin-left value?
.example {
margin-left: calc(5% + 5px);
}
- The left margin value is equal to 5% of its parents element's width plus 5px
- The left margin value is equal to 5% of the viewport width plus 5px
- The left margin value is equal to 5% of the closest positioned element's width plus 5px
- The left margin value is equal to 5% of the selected element's width (.example) plus 5px
-
a[title]
-
a > title
-
a=title
-
a.title
Note: an alternative for Q2.
-
.logo { position: absolute; left: 100px; top: 150px; }
-
.logo { position: absolute; margin-left: 100px; margin-top: 150px; }
-
.logo { position: absolute; padding-left: 100px; padding-top: 150px; }
-
.logo { position: absolute; left-padding: 100px; top-padding: 150px; }
p:first-of-type {
color: red;
}
p {
color: blue;
}
.container {
color: yellow;
}
p:first-child {
color: green;
}
<div class="container">
<h1>Heading</h1>
<p>Paragraph1</p>
<p>Paragraph2</p>
</div>
- blue
- green
- red
- yellow
- It is used to format the appearance of placeholder text within a form control.
- It specifies the default input text for a form control.
- It writes text content into a hyperlink tooltip.
- It writes text content into any page element.
Q54. Which statement is true of the single colon (:
) or double colon (::
) notations for pseudo-elements-for example, ::before
and :before
?
- All browsers support single and double colons for new and older pseudo-elements. So you can use either but it is convention to use single colons for consistency.
- In CSS3, the double colon notation (
::
) was introduced to create a consistency between pseudo-elements from pseudo-classes. For newer browsers, use the double colon notation. For IE8 and below, using single colon notation (:
). - Only the new CSS3 pseudo-elements require the double colon notation while the CSS2 pseudo-elements do not.
- In CSS3, the double colon notation (
::
) was introduced to differentiate pseudo-elements from pseudo-classes. However, modern browsers support both formats. Older browsers such as IE8 and below do not.
- normal
- italic
- none
- oblique
- to set the font size of the text
- to load custom fonts into stylesheet
- to change the name of the font declared in the font-family
- to set the color of the text
Q57. When elements within a container overlap, the z-index property can be used to indicate how those items are stacked on top of each other. Which set of statements is true?
-
1. Larger z-index values appear on top elements with a lower z-index value. 2. Negative and positive number can be used. 3. z-index can be used only on positioned elements.
-
1. Smaller z-index values appear on top of elements with a larger z-index value. 2. Negative and positive numbers can be used. 3. z-index can be used with or without positioned elements.
-
1. Smaller z-index values appear on top of elements with a larger z-index value. 2. Negative and positive number can be used. 3. z-index must also be used with positioned elements.
-
1. Larger z-index values appear on top of elements with a lower z-index value. 2. Only positive number can be used. 3. z-index must also be used with positioned elements.
Note: an alternative for Q13.
Q58. You have a large image that needs to fit into a 400 x 200 pixel area. What should you resize the image to if your users are using Retina displays?
- 2000 x 1400 pixels
- 200 x 100 pixels
- 800 x 400 pixels
- 400 x 200 pixels
- under the User Agent Stylesheet section on the right
- in the third panel under the Layout tab
- under the HTML view on the left
- in the middle panel
- semantic meaning
- content meaning
- document structure
- content appearance
- images
- #images
- Images
- my images
- It is easier to manage.
- It is easier to add multiple styles through it.
- It can be used to quickly test local CSS overrides.
- It reduces conflict with other CSS definition methods.
Q63. Which W3C status code represents a CSS specification that is fully implemented by modern browsers?
- Proposed Recommendation
- Working Draft
- Recommendation
- Candidate Recommendation
color: red; /* declaration A */
font-size: 1em; /* declaration B */
padding: 10px 0; /* declaration C */
- Declaration A is invalid.
- Declaration B is invalid.
- Declaration C is invalid.
- All declarations are valid.
Q65. Which CSS will cause your links to have a solid blue background that changes to semitransparent on hover?
-
a:link { background: #0000ff; } a:hover { background: rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.5); }
-
a { color: blue; } a:hover { background: white; }
-
a:link { background: blue; } a:hover { color: rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.5); }
-
a:hover { background: rgba(blue, 50%); } a:link { background: rgba(blue); }
-
div.sidebar {}
-
* {}
-
div#sidebar2 p {}
-
.sidebar p {}
Q67. The body of your page includes some HTML sections. How will it look with the following CSS applied?
body {
background: #ffffff; /* white */
}
section {
background: #0000ff; /* blue */
height: 200px;
}
- blue sections on a white background
- Yellow sections on a blue background
- Green sections on a white background
- blue sections on a red background
-
!elevate!
-
*prime
-
override
-
!important
-
a:visited
-
a:hover
-
a:link
-
a:focus
-
background-color: #aaa;
-
background-color: #999999;
-
background-color: rgba(170,170,170,0.5);
-
background-color: rgba(170,170,170,0.2);
Q71. Which CSS selector can you use to select all elements on your page associated with the two classes header and clear?
-
."header clear" {}
-
header#clear {}
-
.header.clear {}
-
.header clear {}
- "h1" string
- "a" character
- "p" character
- "*" character
h1 {
color: red;
}
- property; declaration
- declaration; rule
- "p" character
- selector; property
font-weight: bold;
- font-weight: 400;
- font-weight: medium;
- font-weight: 700;
- font-weight: Black;
Q75. You want your styling to be based on a font stack consisting of three fonts. Where should the generic font for your font family be specified?
- It should be the first one on the list.
- Generic fonts are discouraged from this list.
- It should be the last one on the list.
- It should be the second one on the list.
- It requires you to host font files on your own server.
- It uses more of your site's bandwidth.
- It offers a narrow selection of custom fonts.
- It is not always a free service.
- by using an HTML link element referring to a Google-provided CSS
- by embedding the font file directly into the project's master JavaScript
- by using a Google-specific CSS syntax that directly links to the desired font file
- by using a standard font-face CSS definition sourcing a font file on Google's servers
Q78. Using the following HTML and CSS example, what will equivalent pixel value be for .em and .rem elements?
html {
font-size: 10px;
}
body {
font-size: 2rem;
}
.rem {
font-size: 1.5rem;
}
.em {
font-size: 2em;
}
<body>
<p class="rem"></p>
<p class="em"></p>
</body>
- The .rem will be equivalent to 25px; the .em value will be 20px.
- The .rem will be equivalent to 15px; the .em value will be 20px.
- The .rem will be equivalent to 15px; the .em value will be 40px.
- The .rem will be equivalent to 20px; the .em value will be 40px.
-
font-style
-
text-transform
-
font-variant
-
letter-spacing
Q80. What is the correct syntax for changing the cursor from an arrow to a pointing hand when it interacts with a named element?
-
.element {cursor: pointer;}
-
.element {cursor: hand;}
-
.element {cursor: move-hand;}
-
.element {cursor: pointer-hand;}
background-position: 10% 50%;
- The background image is placed 10% from the left and 50% from the top of its container
- The background image is placed 10% from the bottom and 50% from the left of its container
- The background image is placed 10% from the right and 50% from the bottom of its container
- The background image is placed 10% from the top and 50% from the left of its container
grid-template-columns: 2fr 1fr;
- The first column is twice the height of the second column and will be as wide as the content
- The first column is half the size of the container and the second column will absorb the remaining space
- The first column is twice as wide as the second column and will fit proportionally within the grid container
- The first column is twice the width and height of the second column, and will fit proportionally within the grid container
<img id="photo" alt="" src="..." />
- img#photo:hover {scale: 0.5;}
- img#photo:hover {transform: scale(0.5);}
- img#photo {hover-scale: 0.5;}
- img#photo:hover {size: smaller;}
Q84. Which CSS properties can you use to create a rounded corner on just the top-left and top-right corners of an element?
A. border-radius: 10px 10px 0 0;
B. border-top-left-radius: 10px; and border-top-right-radius: 10px;
C. border-radius: 10px 0;
D. border-top-radius: 10px;
- A and C
- C and D
- B and C
- A and B
Q85. Review the HTML example below. Then choose the list of selectors that select the <p>, from lowest to highest specificity.
<section>
<p class="example">...</p>
</section>
-
1. section \* { ...; } 2. [class*='example'] { ...; } 3. p.example { ...; } 4. section p { ...; }
-
1. p { ...; } 2. p.example { ...; } 3. section p { ...; } 4. [class*='example'] { ...; }
-
1. p.example { ...; } 2. section p { ...; } 3. [class*='example'] { ...; } 4. section \* { ...; }
-
1. p { ...; } 2. section p { ...; } 3. [class*='example'] { ...; } 4. p.example { ...; }
- element-shadow
- outer-shadow
- dropbox-shadow
- box-shadow
-
input[type="text"]:not([disabled]) {...}
-
input[type="text"]:not("disabled") {...}
-
input[type*="text"]:not([disabled="disabled"]) {...}
-
input[type="text"]:not([type="disabled"]) {...}
input[type="text"]
selects all the input with type text, and :not([disabled])
selects all the elements not having the attribute "disabled". Combining both only selects all the input elements with type attribte as "text" and not having "disabled" attribute.`
Reference link attribute-selector
-
background-color: hsl(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
-
background-color: rgbx(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
-
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
-
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 1);
rgba
is a funtion in css. rgba stands for red, green, blue and alpha. The value of alpha can be between 0 and 1 both inclusive with 0 being fully transparent and 1 being fully opaque.
Q89. Using this HTML markup, how would you select only the headings contained within the <header>
element?
<header>
<hl>Heading 1</h1>
<h2>Heading 2</h2>
</header>
<h2>Heading 2</h2>
-
header h1, header h2 {...}
-
header h1 + header h2 {...}
-
header h1, h2 {...}
-
h1, h2 {...}
Q90. Suppose you want to have a list of items (.item) displayed in a row and in reverse order using flexbox. What is the error in the CSS below?
.container {
display: flex;
}
.item {
border: 1px solid red;
flex-direction: row-reverse;
}
- The value for flex-direction should be reverse-row.
- The .container element should have a property of flex: display.
- The flex-direction property should be declared in the container.
- The display value should be flex-inline to display the items in a row.
-
transition: margin 1000ms ease-in-out;
-
transition: color 1.3s ease-in;
-
transition: position 400ms linear;
-
transition: opacity 1s ease-in;
article p {
color: blue;
}
article > p {
color: green;
}
<article>
<p>Paragraph 1</p>
<aside>
<p>Paragraph 2</p>
</aside>
</article>
- Paragraph 1 will be blue. Paragraph 2 will be green.
- Both paragraphs will be green.
- Paragraph 1 will be green. Paragraph 2 will be blue.
- Both paragraphs will be blue.
border: 1px solid red;
-
border-size: 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: red;
-
border-size: 1px; border-type: solid; border-color: red;
-
border-width: 1px; border-style: solid; border-color: red;
-
border-width: 1px; border-line: solid; border-color: red;
- style the state of the selected element
- insert presentational content
- style a specific part of the selected element
- style the elements using class selectors
section {
color: gray;
}
<section>
<p>paragraph</p>
<a href="#">link</a>
</section>
- The paragraph and link will be gray.
- The background color of the section element will be gray.
- The paragraph will be gray. The link will be the browser default, black.
- Only the paragraph will be gray.
Q96. Which answer is an example of a type selector (also sometimes referred to as an element selector)?
-
.header {...}
-
header {...}
-
#header {...}
-
header > h1 {...}
Q97. What is the correct order for listing different link states in a website so those states display correctly on the page?
-
a a:hover
-
:link :visited :hover :active :focus
-
:active :focus :hover :link :visited
-
:link :visited :focus :hover :active
-
section * p
-
section + p
-
section ~ p
-
section > p
ul {
--color: red;
}
p {
color: var(--color);
}
a {
color: var(--color, orange);
}
<p>Paragraph</p>
<ul>
<li>
<a href="#">list item a link </a>
</li>
<li>list item</li>
</ul>
- red
- orange
- blue
- black
- Specificity determines which CSS rule is applied by the browsers.
- When two selectors apply to the same element, the one with lower specificity wins.
- The last rule defined overrides all previous rules and even conflicting rules.
- Rules with more specific selectors have greater specificity.
Q101. What is the output of the margin value when used within this context, assuming that its containing element is larger than 800px?
.example {
width: 800px;
margin: 0 auto;
}
-
The example element will have 0 margin space around the whole element. The auto value will center align the element horizontally and vertically within its container.
-
The example element will have 0 margin space on the left and right. It will be sized automatically on the top and bottom, which will center align the element within its container.
-
The example element will have 0 margin space on the top and bottom. The margin will be sized automatically on the left and right, which may center align the element within its container.
-
The margin value is invalid because its missing a unit measurement after the 0.
Q102. There are currently four viewport-percentage lengths that can be used to define the value relative to the viewport size: vw, vh, vmin, and vmax. If the current viewport size has a width of 800px and a height of 600px, what will these values be equivalent to in pixels?
10vw = ?px
10vh = ?px
10vmin = ?px
10vmax = ?px
-
10vw = 80px 10vh = 60px 10vmin = 60px 10vmax = 80px
-
10vw = 60px 10vh = 80px 10vmin = 80px 10vmax = 60px
-
10vw = 8px 10vh = 6px 10vmin = 6px 10vmax = 8px
-
10vw = 6px 10vh = 8px 10vmin = 8px 10vmax = 6px
h2 ~ p {
color: blue;
}
<section>
<p>P1</p>
<h2>H2</h2>
<p>P3</p>
<p>P4</p>
</section>
- P3P3
- P1P1
- P1, P3, and P4P1, P3, and P4
- P3 and P4
p:first-of-type:first-letter {
color: red;
}
<body>
<p>Paragraph 1.</p>
<p>Paragraph 2.</p>
<article>
<h1>Heading</h1>
<p>Paragraph 3.</p>
<p>paragraph 4.</p>
</article>
<section>
<p>Paragraph 5.</p>
<p>Paragraph 6.</p>
</section>
</body>
- The first letter in all paragraphs will be red.
- Only the first letter in paragraphs 1 and 5 will be red.
- The first letter in paragraphs 1, 3, and 5 will be red.
- Only the first letter in paragraph 1 will be red.Only
- margin, padding, border, width, height
- width, height, z-index, overflow, font size
- margin, padding, font size, line height, border
- font size, line height, letter spacing, width, height
- A
a[href$='domain.com'] {
color: pink;
}
- B
a[href='*domain.com'] {
color: pink;
}
- C
a[href*='domain.com'] {
color: rgb(255, 155, 155);
}
- D
a[href*='domain.com'] {
color: pink;
}
-
css background: linear-gradient(#648880, #293f50);
-
css background-image: linear(#648880, #293f50);
-
css background: gradient(linear, #648880, #293f50);
-
css background-color: linear-gradient(#648880, #293f50);
- A
.glyphicon-bgcircle {
circle-radius: 50%;
margins: 50px;
background-color: #fdadc6;
color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 1);
font-size: 24px;
}
- B
glyphicon-bgcircle {
border-circle: 50%;
padding: 50px;
background-color: #fdadc6;
color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 1);
font-size: 24px;
}
- C
.glyphicon-bgcircle {
border-radius: 50%;
padding: 50px;
background-color: #fdadc6;
color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 1);
font-size: 24px;
}
- D
.glyphicon-bgcircle {
radius-rounded: 50%;
margins: auto;
background-color: #fdadc6;
color: rgba(255, 255, 255, 1);
font-size: 24px;
}
- The first value is the first choice, followed by alternative options, ordered by preference. The last option should be a generic font.
- The first value is the first choice. The order of the alternative options does not matter. It depends on what is available on the user's computer.
- The first value is the first choice, and must be followed by at least one alternative option before adding the generic font.
- The first value is the first choice, followed by a maximum of three alternatives.
A. font-size: xsmall
B. font-size: 50%
C. font-size: 1em
D. font-size: 20px
- C, D
- B, C, D
- A, C
- A, B, C, D
Q111. In this image, the blue box and sample text are both contained within the same parent element. The blue box is floated on the left margin of the container. Why is it not contained with the container?
- Floating the blue box increased its height.
- Floating the blue box on the left also moves it down.
- Floating the blue box actually shifts it to the right and down.
- Floating the blue box took it out of document flow and the container is sized only to the sample text.
Q112. Given this code, which CSS declaration of .overlay will span the entire width and height of its container?
<style>
.container {
position: relative;
height: 200px;
width: 200px;
border: 1px solid black;
}
</style>
<div class="container"><div class="overlay"></div></div>
- A
.overlay {
position: static;
top: 200px;
bottom: 200px;
right: 200px;
left: 200px;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
}
- B
.overlay {
position: absolute;
top: 200px;
bottom: 200px;
right: 200px;
left: 200px;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
}
- C
.overlay {
position: static;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
right: 0;
left: 0;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
}
- D
.overlay {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
bottom: 0;
right: 0;
left: 0;
background-color: rgba(0, 0, 0, 0.5);
}
<div class="container">
<img src="grumpy-cat.gif" />
<p>The z-index property is cool!</p>
</div>
img {
position: absolute;
left: 0px;
top: 0px;
// Missing line
}
-
z-index: 1;
-
z-index: -1;
-
z-index: 0;
-
z-index: true;
Q114. To make the font size of an element one size smaller than the font size of the element's container, which style property would you apply?
-
font-size: reduce;
-
font-size: 8px;
-
font-size: -1em;
-
font-size: smaller;
<span class="highlight">#BLM</span>
- A
.highlight {
background-color: yellow;
}
- B
#highlight {
background-color: yellow;
}
- C
.highlight {
color: yellow;
}
- D
#highlight {
color: yellow;
}
Q116. To prevent a background image from tiling in any direction, which style property would you apply?
- A
background-repeat: no-repeat;
- B
background-repeat: fixed;
- C
background-repeat: none;
- D
background-tile: none;
-
transform: rotate(-30deg);
-
transform: rotate(30deg);
-
rotate: 30deg;
-
spin: 30deg;
Q118. Which style rule would you apply to set the background image to display the contents of the wood.png file?
-
background-image: file('wood.png');
-
background-image: url('wood.png');
-
background-image: wood.png;
-
image: wood.png
<section><p>paragraph one</p></section><p>paragraph two</p>
- A
section > p {
color: blue;
}
- B
p {
color: blue;
}
- C
section + p {
color: blue;
}
- D
p + section {
color: blue;
}
-
transform: translateX(-100px)
-
transform: translateY(-100px)
-
transform: translateY(100px)
-
transform: translateX(100px)
<div id="outer">
<div id="inner">Center Me!</div>
</div>
- A
#inner {
width: 50%;
}
#outer {
width: 100%;
}
- B
#inner {
left: 0;
right: 0;
position: center;
}
- C
#inner {
text-align: center;
}
- D
#inner {
width: 50%;
margin: 0 auto;
}
.pen {
height: 100px;
width: 100px;
border: 2px dashed brown;
position: relative;
}
#puppy {
position: absolute;
right: 80px;
bottom: 0px;
}
<div class="pen">
<span id="puppy">🐶</span>
</div>
- top-right corner
- bottom-right corner
- top-left corner
- bottom-left corner
-
a:hover {...}
-
a :hover {...}
-
a.hover {...}
-
a hover {...}
<style>
#cellar-door {
box-shadow: 3px 5px 10px #000;
}
.text-shadow {
text-shadow: 3px 5px 10px #000;
}
</style>
<h1 _____> Cellar Door</h1>
-
class="text-shadow"
-
id="cellar-door"
-
id="text-shadow"
-
class="cellar-door"
-
-- This line has been cancelled.
-
/* This line has been cancelled. */
-
// This line has been cancelled.
-
# This line has been cancelled.
h2 ~ p {
color: blue;
}
<section>
<p>P1</p>
<h2>H2</h2>
<p>P3</p>
<p>P4</p>
</section>
- P3
- P1, P3 and P4
- P3 and P4
- P1