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  • 1. The style property
  • 2. Setting the font color
  • 3. Obtaining the value from the field with the slider
  • 4. Setting the font size
  • 5. Comparing onchange and oninput
  • 6. Configuring the background color
  • 7. The type property
  • 8. Using the checkbox to show the password
  • 9. The checked property
  • 10. Changing the bar length
  • 11. Tying the bar length to the password length
  • 12. Saving the password length as a variable
  • 13. Comparison operators
  • 14. The else if statement
  • 15. Finishing the signup page
  • 16. Summary of “Dynamic element styles”
  • 17. Test: Pixel art
Setting the font color
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The style property

Meow! I came up with a new format: the article is long, and the settings are flexible. Help program everything before our competitors get on to what we are doing!

The editors of the news portal that we worked on in previous chapters are now publishing not just short news stories, but also long articles. In order to make them more convenient to read, users should have the ability to change the text font size and color as well as the background color in these articles.

We will work with the individual article page. The upper part of the page contains the settings: two dropdown lists allowing the user to select a color, and a slider. The dropdown lists are responsible for setting the font color and the article background color. The slider controls the text font size. When a user selects a new value from the list or moves the slider, the layout of the article should change.

We previously used classes to change the appearance of an element. But this approach is not suitable for this problem. There are too many colors in the lists and positions of the slider. In order to properly account for all of the options, we would have to create 76 classes. There is another solution: change the element styles directly.

You can use the style property to manage element styles. After it (after the dot) indicate the CSS property that needs to be changed.

element.style.CSSproperty

In order to change the style of an element, the specified property needs to be assigned a new value. For example:

let element = document.querySelector('p');

// Assign green font color for the paragraph
element.style.color = 'green';

Styles that are defined using the style property work in the same way as if they were specified in the markup in the styleattribute of the element itself. They have a higher priority than CSS rules from a stylesheet.

So, when should you use classes, and when should you use the style property? Use style only in those cases when it becomes unwieldy to solve the problem using classes because of the number of classes involved.

We will change the styles of an individual article page on the news site. This is an element with the longread class. Let’s find it and write it to the variable. In order to check how the style property works, change the font color in the article to violet.

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    <!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en"> <head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="setting.css"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="style.css"> <title>FlashNews!</title> </head> <body class="page page-longread light-theme"> <header class="page-header"> <div class="container"> <a class="header-logo" href="index.html"> <img src="img/main-logo.svg" width="67" height="29" alt="FlashNews! portal logo"> </a> <a href="subscription.html" class="subscription-link">Subscription</a> <button class="theme-button" type="button">Change the theme</button> </div> </header> <main class="index-main"> <div class="controls"> <div class="container"> <div class="color-filters"> <label>Font color: <select class="filter color-setting" name="font-color"> <option value="inherit" selected>Default</option> <option value="black">Black</option> <option value="white">White</option> <option value="ghostwhite">Light gray</option> <option value="pink">Pink</option> <option value="darkred">Dark red</option> <option value="darkorange">Orange</option> <option value="saddlebrown">Brown</option> <option value="gold">Gold</option> <option value="greenyellow">Lime green</option> <option value="forestgreen">Green</option> <option value="aquamarine">Aquamarine</option> <option value="lightskyblue">Sky blue</option> <option value="lightsteelblue">Gray blue</option> <option value="darkblue">Navy blue</option> <option value="indigo">Indigo</option> <option value="mediumpurple">Violet</option> <option value="purple">Purple</option> </select> </label> <label>Background color: <select class="filter background-setting" name="background-color"> <option value="inherit" selected>Default</option> <option value="black">Black</option> <option value="white">White</option> <option value="ghostwhite">Light gray</option> <option value="pink">Pink</option> <option value="darkred">Dark red</option> <option value="darkorange">Orange</option> <option value="saddlebrown">Brown</option> <option value="gold">Gold</option> <option value="greenyellow">Lime green</option> <option value="forestgreen">Green</option> <option value="aquamarine">Aquamarine</option> <option value="lightskyblue">Sky blue</option> <option value="lightsteelblue">Gray blue</option> <option value="darkblue">Navy blue</option> <option value="indigo">Indigo</option> <option value="mediumpurple">Violet</option> <option value="purple">Purple</option> </select> </label> </div> <label>Font size (<span class="pixels">14</span>px) <input class="size-setting" type="range" min="8" max="48" step="1" value="14"> </label> </div> </div> <article class="longread"> <div class="container"> <h1>Why Do We Need Algorithms?</h1> <p>Many people are afraid of the word "algorithm." It can seem to them that this is something complicated, but in reality it is just a complete set of instructions. It turns out that you use algorithms in your everyday life, such as, for example, when you cook according to a recipe, or you get from point A to point B using your GPS navigation, or you solve a quadratic equation.</p> <p>When developers talk about algorithms, they are not referring to just any kind of algorithm, but only to what are considered the popular solutions to standard problems. Many algorithms were invented even before there were computers: for example, the radix sorting algorithm was patented in the United States in the nineteenth century to process census data.</p> <p>Various algorithms can be used effectively to solve the same problem. Imagine that you have a list in which you want to find an element. Let's assume that this is a list of products for sale in an online store, and the user enters a product name in the filter that starts with the letter "E". How can we do that?</p> <p>If the list is sorted alphabetically, then a binary search is the most suitable: you look in the middle of the list and find a product there whose name begins with "K", for example. The list is sorted, so you know for sure that the product you need is on the left side of the list, because "E" occurs before "K" in the alphabet. Now take the left side of the list and perform another binary search on it.</p> <p>If the list is not sorted, then a brute force search is better. According to this method, you go through the list from the beginning to the end until you find the element that you are interested in. In the worst case scenario, you will have to look through all of the elements, but then at least you will have advanced knowledge of the amount of time that is required to find the desired item.</p> <p>You need to select the appropriate algorithm for the problem at hand. Gain an understanding of the data that you are working with, and build on that.</p> </div> </article> </main> <footer class="page-footer"> <div class="container"> <p>© FlashNews!</p> <a class="footer-logo"> <img src="img/white-logo.svg" alt="FlashNews! portal logo"> </a> </div> </footer> <script src="themes.js"></script> <script src="read-mode.js"></script> </body> </html>
    /* Longread styles */ .controls { padding: 16px 0 6px; overflow-x: hidden; } .controls label { font-size: 14px; line-height: 24px; margin-bottom: 14px; } .color-filters { display: flex; margin-right: -20px; } .color-filters label { display: flex; flex-direction: column; flex-grow: 1; margin-right: 20px; } .color-filters .filter { margin-top: 4px; } .controls .filter { margin-left: 0; } .longread { min-height: calc(100vh - 237px); padding-bottom: 1em; font-size: 14px; } .longread h1 { margin: 1em 0 0.6em; line-height: 1.2; } .longread p { margin: 0 0 0.8em; line-height: 1.6; } /* Cross-browser range input without JavaScript */ .size-setting { -webkit-appearance: none; -moz-appearance: none; appearance: none; display: block; width: 100%; height: 10px; margin-top: 8px; padding: 2px 0; border-radius: 5px; outline-offset: 0; } .size-setting::-webkit-slider-thumb { box-sizing: border-box; -webkit-appearance: none; width: 20px; height: 20px; border-radius: 50%; } .size-setting::-moz-range-thumb { box-sizing: border-box; -moz-appearance: none; width: 20px; height: 20px; border-radius: 50%; } .size-setting::-ms-thumb { box-sizing: border-box; width: 20px; height: 20px; border-radius: 50%; } /* Color themes */ .page-longread.light-theme { background-color: #ffffff; color: #333333; } .light-theme .controls { background-color: #eae9f2; } .light-theme .size-setting { background-color: #ffffff; box-shadow: inset 0 0 0 1px #b6aaff; outline-color: #b6aaff; } .light-theme .size-setting::-webkit-slider-thumb { background-color: #ffffff; border: 5px solid #6653d9; } .light-theme .size-setting::-moz-range-thumb { background-color: #ffffff; border: 5px solid #6653d9; } .light-theme .size-setting::-ms-thumb { background-color: #ffffff; border: 5px solid #6653d9; } .light-theme .size-setting::-webkit-slider-thumb:active { background-color: #6653d9; } .light-theme .size-setting::-moz-range-thumb:active { background-color: #6653d9; } .light-theme .size-setting::-ms-thumb:active { background-color: #6653d9; } .page-longread.dark-theme { background-color: #0a0910; color: #f2f2f2; } .dark-theme .controls { background-color: #17161a; } .dark-theme .size-setting { background-color: #0a0910; box-shadow: inset 0 0 0 1px #473c8d; outline-color: #6653d9; } .dark-theme .size-setting::-webkit-slider-thumb { background-color: #0a0910; border: 5px solid #9484f2; } .dark-theme .size-setting::-moz-range-thumb { background-color: #0a0910; border: 5px solid #9484f2; } .dark-theme .size-setting::-ms-thumb { background-color: #0a0910; border: 5px solid #9484f2; } .dark-theme .size-setting::-webkit-slider-thumb:active { background-color: #9484f2; } .dark-theme .size-setting::-moz-range-thumb:active { background-color: #9484f2; } .dark-theme .size-setting::-ms-thumb:active { background-color: #9484f2; }
    let page = document.querySelector('.page'); let themeButton = document.querySelector('.theme-button'); themeButton.onclick = function () { page.classList.toggle('light-theme'); page.classList.toggle('dark-theme'); };

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      1. Declare a variable longread and assign the element with the longread class to it.
      2. On the next line assign violet font color to the longread element: longread.style.color = 'purple';.
        Please note that the font color in the article has been changed to violet.

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