freeCodeCamp/curriculum/challenges/english/03-front-end-libraries/sass/nest-css-with-sass.english.md

2.1 KiB

id title challengeType
587d7dbd367417b2b2512bb5 Nest CSS with Sass 0

Description

Sass allows nesting of CSS rules, which is a useful way of organizing a style sheet. Normally, each element is targeted on a different line to style it, like so:
nav {
  background-color: red;
}

nav ul {
  list-style: none;
}

nav ul li {
  display: inline-block;
}
For a large project, the CSS file will have many lines and rules. This is where nesting can help organize your code by placing child style rules within the respective parent elements:
nav {
  background-color: red;

  ul {
    list-style: none;

    li {
      display: inline-block;
    }
  }
}

Instructions

Use the nesting technique shown above to re-organize the CSS rules for both children of .blog-post element. For testing purposes, the h1 should come before the p element.

Tests

tests:
  - text: Your code should re-organize the CSS rules so the <code>h1</code> and <code>p</code> are nested in the <code>.blog-post</code> parent element.
    testString: assert(code.match(/\.blog-post\s*?{\s*?h1\s*?{\s*?text-align:\s*?center;\s*?color:\s*?blue;\s*?}\s*?p\s*?{\s*?font-size:\s*?20px;\s*?}\s*?}/gi), 'Your code should re-organize the CSS rules so the <code>h1</code> and <code>p</code> are nested in the <code>.blog-post</code> parent element.');

Challenge Seed

<style type='text/sass'>
  .blog-post {

  }
  h1 {
    text-align: center;
    color: blue;
  }
  p {
    font-size: 20px;
  }
</style>

<div class="blog-post">
  <h1>Blog Title</h1>
  <p>This is a paragraph</p>
</div>

Solution

// solution required