The CSS Podcast - 005: Inheritance
Say you just wrote some CSS to make elements look like a button.
<a href="http://example.com" class="my-button">I am a button link</a>
.my-button {
display: inline-block;
padding: 1rem 2rem;
text-decoration: none;
background: pink;
font: inherit;
text-align: center;
}
You then add a link element to an article of content,
with a class
value of .my-button
. However there's an issue,
the text is not the color that you expected it to be. How did this happen?
Some CSS properties inherit if you don't specify a value for them.
In the case of this button, it inherited the color
from this CSS:
article a {
color: maroon;
}
In this lesson you'll learn why that happens and how inheritance is a powerful feature to help you write less CSS.
Inheritance flow
Let's take a look at how inheritance works, using this snippet of HTML:
<html>
<body>
<article>
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet.</p>
</article>
</body>
</html>
The root element (<html>
) won't inherit anything because it is the first element in the document.
Add some CSS on the HTML element,
and it starts to cascade down the document.
html {
color: lightslategray;
}
The color
property is inherited by default by other elements.
The html
element has color: lightslategray
,
therefore all elements that can inherit color will now have a color of lightslategray
.
body {
font-size: 1.2em;
}
p {
font-style: italic;
}
Only the <p>
will have italic text because it's the deepest nested element.
Inheritance only flows downwards, not back up to parent elements.
Which properties are inherited by default?
Not all CSS properties are inherited by default, but there are a lot that are. For reference, here is the entire list of properties that are inherited by default, taken from the W3 reference of all CSS properties:
- azimuth
- border-collapse
- border-spacing
- caption-side
- color
- cursor
- direction
- empty-cells
- font-family
- font-size
- font-style
- font-variant
- font-weight
- font
- letter-spacing
- line-height
- list-style-image
- list-style-position
- list-style-type
- list-style
- orphans
- quotes
- text-align
- text-indent
- text-transform
- visibility
- white-space
- widows
- word-spacing
How inheritance works
Every HTML element has every CSS property defined by default with an initial value. An initial value is a property that's not inherited and shows up as a default if the cascade fails to calculate a value for that element.
Properties that can be inherited cascade downwards,
and child elements will get a computed value which represents its parent's value.
This means that if a parent has font-weight
set to bold
all child elements will be bold,
unless their font-weight
is set to a different value,
or the user agent stylesheet has a value for font-weight
for that element.
How to explicitly inherit and control inheritance
Inheritance can affect elements in unexpected ways so CSS has tools to help with that.
The inherit
keyword
You can make any property inherit its parent's computed value with the inherit
keyword.
A useful way to use this keyword is to create exceptions.
strong {
font-weight: 900;
}
This CSS snippet sets all <strong>
elements to have a font-weight
of 900
,
instead of the default bold
value, which would be the equivalent of font-weight: 700
.
.my-component {
font-weight: 500;
}
The .my-component
class sets font-weight
to 500
instead.
To make the <strong>
elements inside .my-component
also font-weight: 500
add:
.my-component strong {
font-weight: inherit;
}
Now, the <strong>
elements inside .my-component
will have a font-weight
of 500
.
You could explicitly set this value,
but if you use inherit
and the CSS of .my-component
changes in the future,
you can guarantee that your <strong>
will automatically stay up to date with it.
The initial
keyword
Inheritance can cause problems with your elements and initial
provides you with a powerful reset option.
You learned earlier that every property has a default value in CSS.
The initial
keyword sets a property back to that initial, default value.
aside strong {
font-weight: initial;
}
This snippet will remove the bold weight from all <strong>
elements inside an <aside>
element and instead,
make them normal weight, which is the initial value.
The unset
keyword
The unset
property behaves differently if a property is inherited by default or not.
If a property is inherited by default,
the unset
keyword will be the same as inherit
.
If the property is not inherited by default, the unset
keyword is equal to initial
.
Remembering which CSS properties are inherited by default can be hard,
unset
can be helpful in that context.
For example, color
is inherited by default,
but margin
isn't, so you can write this:
/* Global color styles for paragraph in authored CSS */
p {
margin-top: 2em;
color: goldenrod;
}
/* The p needs to be reset in asides, so you can use unset */
aside p {
margin: unset;
color: unset;
}
Now, the margin
is removed and color
reverts back to being the inherited computed value.
You can use the unset
value with the all
property, too.
Going back to the above example,
what happens if the global p
styles get an additional few properties?
Only the rule that was set for margin
and color
will apply.
/* Global color styles for paragraph in authored CSS */
p {
margin-top: 2em;
color: goldenrod;
padding: 2em;
border: 1px solid;
}
/* Not all properties are accounted for anymore */
aside p {
margin: unset;
color: unset;
}
If you change the aside p
rule to all: unset
instead,
it doesn't matter what global styles are applied to p
in the future,
they will always be unset.
aside p {
margin: unset;
color: unset;
all: unset;
}
Check your understanding
Test your knowledge of inheritance
Which of the following properties are inheritable?
line-height
color
text-align
font-size
animation
Which value behaves like inherit
unless there is nothing to inherit and
then behaves like initial
?
superset
reset
unset