freeCodeCamp/curriculum/challenges/english/03-front-end-libraries/sass/extend-one-set-of-css-style...

2.8 KiB

id title challengeType
587d7fa5367417b2b2512bbd Extend One Set of CSS Styles to Another Element 0

Description

Sass has a feature called extend that makes it easy to borrow the CSS rules from one element and build upon them in another. For example, the below block of CSS rules style a .panel class. It has a background-color, height and border.
.panel{
  background-color: red;
  height: 70px;
  border: 2px solid green;
}
Now you want another panel called .big-panel. It has the same base properties as .panel, but also needs a width and font-size. It's possible to copy and paste the initial CSS rules from .panel, but the code becomes repetitive as you add more types of panels. The extend directive is a simple way to reuse the rules written for one element, then add more for another:
.big-panel{
  @extend .panel;
  width: 150px;
  font-size: 2em;
}
The .big-panel will have the same properties as .panel in addition to the new styles.

Instructions

Make a class .info-important that extends .info and also has a background-color set to magenta.

Tests

tests:
  - text: Your <code>info-important</code> class should have a <code>background-color</code> set to <code>magenta</code>.
    testString: assert(code.match(/\.info-important\s*?{[\s\S]*background-color\s*?:\s*?magenta\s*?;[\s\S]*}/gi), 'Your <code>info-important</code> class should have a <code>background-color</code> set to <code>magenta</code>.');
  - text: Your <code>info-important</code> class should use <code>@extend</code> to inherit the styling from the <code>info</code> class.
    testString: assert(code.match(/\.info-important\s*?{[\s\S]*@extend\s*?.info\s*?;[\s\S]*/gi), 'Your <code>info-important</code> class should use <code>@extend</code> to inherit the styling from the <code>info</code> class.');

Challenge Seed

<style type='text/sass'>
  h3{
    text-align: center;
  }
  .info{
    width: 200px;
    border: 1px solid black;
    margin: 0 auto;
  }




</style>
<h3>Posts</h3>
<div class="info-important">
  <p>This is an important post. It should extend the class ".info" and have its own CSS styles.</p>
</div>

<div class="info">
  <p>This is a simple post. It has basic styling and can be extended for other uses.</p>
</div>

Solution

// solution required