1.4

l Etcetera. See http://www.w3schools.com/cssref/css_selectors.asp for more CSS
selectors and combinations of CSS selectors.
5. Select the layout options that should apply to selected elements; see "Styling and
formatting" on page 217. Note: where a width can be set as a percentage, it is a
percentage of the space between the margins.
6.
Click OK.
7. In the Stylesheets dialog, click the selector that you chose. All CSS rules for that selector
will become visible in a box below the list of selectors.
Edit plain CSS
l
Click the button Advanced in any property sheet to open a CSS property editor. Type
CSS properties at the left and values at the right.
l
In the Resources pane at the left, double-click the global stylesheet or the stylesheet for
the relevant context. The file opens in the workspace in the middle.
A list of all CSS properties and their possible values can be found here:
http://www.w3schools.com/cssref/.
Step 2: apply CSS to the content
After editing the CSS file(s), make sure that the CSS rules actually apply to one or more
elements in the template.
CSS rules for HTML elements, such as paragraphs, are automatically applied to all elements
with the corresponding HTML tag.
To make a CSS rule for a certain class or ID work for an element in your document, you have to
add the class or ID to that HTML element.
Note
Classes may be reused throughout one section, but a specific ID should not be used more than once
in each section. CSS layout rules for an element with a certain ID only apply to the first element
with that ID in each section. If you have two sections inside of a Print context, then you can have
the same ID on two sections; t hey will both be affected by the CSS rules for the element with that
ID.
Page 223