Issue
I would like to use conditions in my CSS.
The idea is that I have a variable that I replace when the site is run to generate the right style-sheet.
I want it so that according to this variable the style-sheet changes!
It looks like:
[if {var} eq 2 ]
background-position : 150px 8px;
[else]
background-position : 4px 8px;
Can this be done? How do you do this?
Solution
Not in the traditional sense, but you can use classes for this, if you have access to the HTML. Consider this:
<p class="normal">Text</p>
<p class="active">Text</p>
and in your CSS file:
p.normal {
background-position : 150px 8px;
}
p.active {
background-position : 4px 8px;
}
That's the CSS way to do it.
Then there are CSS preprocessors like Sass. You can use conditionals there, which'd look like this:
$type: monster;
p {
@if $type == ocean {
color: blue;
} @else if $type == matador {
color: red;
} @else if $type == monster {
color: green;
} @else {
color: black;
}
}
Disadvantages are, that you're bound to pre-process your stylesheets, and that the condition is evaluated at compile time, not run time.
A newer feature of CSS proper are custom properties (a.k.a. CSS variables). They are evaluated at run time (in browsers supporting them).
With them you could do something along the line:
:root {
--main-bg-color: brown;
}
.one {
background-color: var(--main-bg-color);
}
.two {
background-color: black;
}
Finally, you can preprocess your stylesheet with your favourite server-side language. If you're using PHP, serve a style.css.php
file, that looks something like this:
p {
background-position: <?php echo (@$_GET['foo'] == 'bar')? "150" : "4"; ?>px 8px;
}
In this case, you will however have a performance impact, since caching such a stylesheet will be difficult.
Answered By - Boldewyn
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