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Start your free trialAaron Gomez
2,271 PointsWhy not say ".phone"?
In the video, Nick explains why he didn't include a space after the li nested in .contact-info when he wrote ".phone". My question is, since he identified the class as phone, a class no other property shares, why couldn't he just write li.phone or .phone. Why does the computer need to know that the element is nested inside .contact info?
2 Answers
Matt F.
9,518 PointsLets say you have a page with multiple elements with a class of phone.
<div class="contact-info">
<ul>
<li class="phone">
</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div class="other-class">
<ul>
<li class="phone">
</li>
</ul>
</div>
If you just use .phone then the styles apply to both li's but if you use .contact-info .phone it will only apply the styles to the first div.
Hope this helps.
Michael Plemmons
9,393 PointsThis is sort of on topic with this, but since we specified li.phone, would it still be correct to specify .contact-info as ul.contact-info? The reason for not doing that is because the class was only used once? Same with the .phone circumstance? Just seeing if I'm correct in this line of thinking.
Aaron Gomez
2,271 PointsAaron Gomez
2,271 PointsYes it does. But in the case of the lesson, there was only one element with the class "phone". If that is the only element you want to work on, would it have worked to only say .phone?
Matt F.
9,518 PointsMatt F.
9,518 PointsYes, if you have an element with the phone class in the HTML and the only CSS selector refers to the phone class, it will apply the defined styles to that element.
What I outlined above is a reasoning for why you may want to add more specificity when developing pages.