CSS (Cascading style sheet)
cascading style sheet
Cascading Style Sheet
CSS (Cascading Style Sheet) is a proramming language that is used with HTML to create the layout of a page.
Cascading Style Sheet is a way of styling your document. It is a set of commands which make a page much more interactive.
The cascading that is referred to in the name cascading style sheets refers to how rules can cascade in how they are implement. CSS rules can be found in three places: an external style sheet, and internal style sheet, or inline. Cascading refers to precedence. A rule located inline, will take precedence over a rule located in an internal style sheet and a rule located in an internal style sheet will take precedence over a rule located in an external style sheet. Within a single style sheet (for example an external style sheet) a rule located at the bottom of the style sheet takes precedence over a rule located at the top of the style sheet. This allows you fine tuned control over your styles and how and when they display and which one will display based upon where in the cascading hierarchy they appear.
Cascading Style Sheet
(if you mean the style sheet language) Cascading Style Sheets
cascading style sheet (CSS)
CSS stands for Cascading Style Sheet, which makes websites beautiful, simply saying.
Foundation is a kind of Cascading Style Sheet. It is also called as Zurb Foundation.
The conflicting style rules are resolved by introducing internal and external CSS. It defined a common cascading style sheet for all.