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@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ For other cases, like making the text red, adding a background icon -- describe
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## className and classList
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Changing a class is one of the most often actions in scripts.
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Changing a class is one of the most often used actions in scripts.
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In the ancient time, there was a limitation in JavaScript: a reserved word like `"class"` could not be an object property. That limitation does not exist now, but at that time it was impossible to have a `"class"` property, like `elem.class`.
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@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ Besides that, `classList` is iterable, so we can list all classes like this:
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```html run
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<body class="main page">
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<script>
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for(let name of document.body.classList) {
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for (let name of document.body.classList) {
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alert(name); // main, and then page
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}
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</script>
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@ -223,7 +223,7 @@ element
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: Element to read the value for.
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pseudo
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: A pseudo-element if required, for instance `::before`. An empty string or no argument mean the element itself.
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: A pseudo-element if required, for instance `::before`. An empty string or no argument means the element itself.
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The result is an object with style properties, like `elem.style`, but now with respect to all CSS classes.
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@ -250,10 +250,10 @@ For instance:
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```smart header="Computed and resolved values"
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There are two concepts in [CSS](https://drafts.csswg.org/cssom/#resolved-values):
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1. A *computed* style value is the value after all CSS rules and CSS inheritance is applied, as the result of the CSS cascade. If can look like `height:1em` or `font-size:125%`.
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1. A *computed* style value is the value after all CSS rules and CSS inheritance is applied, as the result of the CSS cascade. It can look like `height:1em` or `font-size:125%`.
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2. A *resolved* style value is the one finally applied to the element. Values like `1em` or `125%` are relative. The browser takes the computed value and makes all units fixed and absolute, for instance: `height:20px` or `font-size:16px`. For geometry properties resolved values may have a floating point, like `width:50.5px`.
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Long time ago `getComputedStyle` was created to get computed values, but it turned out that resolved values are much more convenient, and the standard changed.
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A long time ago `getComputedStyle` was created to get computed values, but it turned out that resolved values are much more convenient, and the standard changed.
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So nowadays `getComputedStyle` actually returns the resolved value of the property.
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```
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@ -283,7 +283,7 @@ Visited links may be colored using `:visited` CSS pseudoclass.
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But `getComputedStyle` does not give access to that color, because otherwise an arbitrary page could find out whether the user visited a link by creating it on the page and checking the styles.
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JavaScript we may not see the styles applied by `:visited`. And also, there's a limitation in CSS that forbids to apply geometry-changing styles in `:visited`. That's to guarantee that there's no side way for an evil page to test if a link was visited and hence to break the privacy.
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JavaScript we may not see the styles applied by `:visited`. And also, there's a limitation in CSS that forbids to apply geometry-changing styles in `:visited`. That's to guarantee that there's no sideway for an evil page to test if a link was visited and hence to break the privacy.
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```
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## Summary
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