Difference in applying CSS to html, body, and the universal selector *?
How are these three rules different when applied to the same HTML document?
html {
color: black;
background-color: white;
}
body {
color: black;
background-color: white;
}
* {
color: black;
background-color: white;
}
Solution 1:
-
html { color: black; background-color: white; }
This rule applies the colors to the
html
element. All descendants of thehtml
element inherit itscolor
(but notbackground-color
), includingbody
. Thebody
element has no default background color, meaning it's transparent, sohtml
's background will show through until and unless you set a background forbody
.Although the background of
html
is painted over the entire viewport, thehtml
element itself does not span the entire height of the viewport automatically; the background is simply propagated to the viewport. See this answer for details. -
body { color: black; background-color: white; }
This rule applies the colors to the
body
element. All descendants of thebody
element inherit itscolor
.Similarly to how the background of
html
is propagated to the viewport automatically, the background ofbody
will be propagated tohtml
automatically, until and unless you set a background forhtml
as well. See this answer for an explanation. Because of this, if you only need one background (in usual circumstances), whether you use the first rule or the second rule won't make any real difference.You can, however, combine background styles for
html
andbody
with other tricks to get some nifty background effects, like I've done here. See the above linked answer for how. -
* { color: black; background-color: white; }
This rule applies the colors to every element, so neither of the two properties is implicitly inherited. But you can easily override this rule with anything else, including either of the above two rules, as
*
has literally no significance in selector specificity.Because this breaks the inheritance chain completely for any property that is normally inherited such as
color
, setting those properties in a*
rule is considered bad practice unless you have a very good reason to break inheritance this way (most use cases that involve breaking inheritance require you to do it for just one element, not all of them).