A variety of common HTML elements to demonstrate the theme’s stylesheet and verify they have been styled appropriately.
Single line blockquote:
Stay hungry. Stay foolish.
Multi line blockquote with a cite reference:
People think focus means saying yes to the thing you’ve got to focus on. But that’s not what it means at all. It means saying no to the hundred other good ideas that there are. You have to pick carefully. I’m actually as proud of the things we haven’t done as the things I have done. Innovation is saying no to 1,000 things.
Quoted text inline using <q>
element:
Luke continued, And then she called him a
The poor naive fool…scruffy-looking nerf-herder
! I think I’ve got a chance!
Employee | Salary | |
---|---|---|
John Doe | $1 | Because that’s all Steve Jobs needed for a salary. |
Jane Doe | $100K | For all the blogging she does. |
Fred Bloggs | $100M | Pictures are worth a thousand words, right? So Jane × 1,000. |
Jane Bloggs | $100B | With hair like that?! Enough said. |
Header1 | Header2 | Header3 |
---|---|---|
cell1 | cell2 | cell3 |
cell4 | cell5 | cell6 |
cell1 | cell2 | cell3 |
cell4 | cell5 | cell6 |
Foot1 | Foot2 | Foot3 |
Make any link standout more when applying the .btn
class.
<a href="#" class="btn--success">Success Button</a>
Default Button Primary Button Accent Button Success Button Warning Button Danger Button Info Button Inverse Button Light Outline Button
[Default Button Text](#link){: .btn}
[Primary Button Text](#link){: .btn .btn--primary}
[Accent Button Text](#link){: .btn .btn--accent}
[Success Button Text](#link){: .btn .btn--success}
[Warning Button Text](#link){: .btn .btn--warning}
[Danger Button Text](#link){: .btn .btn--danger}
[Info Button Text](#link){: .btn .btn--info}
[Inverse Button](#link){: .btn .btn--inverse}
[Light Outline Button](#link){: .btn .btn--light-outline}
X-Large Button Large Button Default Button Small Button
[X-Large Button](#link){: .btn .btn--primary .btn--x-large}
[Large Button](#link){: .btn .btn--primary .btn--large}
[Default Button](#link){: .btn .btn--primary }
[Small Button](#link){: .btn .btn--primary .btn--small}
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice}
class.
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice--primary}
class.
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice--accent}
class.
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice--info}
class.
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice--warning}
class.
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice--success}
class.
Watch out! This paragraph of text has been emphasized with the {: .notice--danger}
class.
This is an example of a link.
The abbreviation CSS stands for “Cascading Style Sheets”.
“Code is poetry.” —Automattic
You will learn later on in these tests that word-wrap: break-word;
will be your best friend.
This element will let you strikeout text.
The emphasize element should italicize text.
This element should denote inserted text.
This scarcely known element emulates keyboard text, which is usually styled like the <code>
element.
This element styles large blocks of code.
.post-title { margin: 0 0 5px; font-weight: bold; font-size: 38px; line-height: 1.2; and here's a line of some really, really, really, really long text, just to see how the PRE element handles it and to find out how it overflows; }
Developers, developers, developers…
–Steve Ballmer
This element shows bold text.
Getting our science styling on with H2O, which should push the “2” down.
Still sticking with science and Isaac Newton’s E = MC2, which should lift the 2 up.
This allows you to denote variables.