The “C” in CSS: The Cascade

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Thomas Yip on (Updated on )

Following up from Geoff’s intro article on The Second “S” in CSS, let’s now move the spotlight to the “C” in CSS — what we call the Cascade. It’s where things start to get messy, and even confusing at times.

Have you ever written a CSS property and the value doesn’t seem to work? Maybe you had to turn to using !important to get it going. Or perhaps you resorted to writing the CSS inline on the element in the HTML file.

<div style="background:orange; height:100px; width:100px;">
  Ack, inline!
</div>

Speaking of inline styles, have you wondered why SVG editors use them instead of a separate CSS file? That seems kinda weird, right?

<svg id="icon-logo-star" viewBox="0 0 362.62 388.52" width="100%" height="100%">
  <style>
    .logo {
      fill: #ff9800;
    }
  </style>
  <title>CSS Tricks Logo</title>
  <path class="logo" d="M156.58 239l-88.3 64.75c-10.59 7.06-18.84 11.77-29.43 11.77-21.19 0-38.85-18.84-38.85-40 0-17.69 14.13-30.64 27.08-36.52l103.6-44.74-103.6-45.92C13 142.46 0 129.51 0 111.85 0 90.66 18.84 73 40 73c10.6 0 17.66 3.53 28.25 11.77l88.3 64.75-11.74-104.78C141.28 20 157.76 0 181.31 0s40 18.84 36.5 43.56L206 149.52l88.3-64.75C304.93 76.53 313.17 73 323.77 73a39.2 39.2 0 0 1 38.85 38.85c0 18.84-12.95 30.61-27.08 36.5l-103.61 45.91L335.54 239c14.13 5.88 27.08 18.83 27.08 37.67 0 21.19-18.84 38.85-40 38.85-9.42 0-17.66-4.71-28.26-11.77L206 239l11.77 104.78c3.53 24.72-12.95 44.74-36.5 44.74s-40-18.84-36.5-43.56z"></path>
</svg>

Well, the cascade has a lot to do with this. Read on to find out how styling methods affect what’s being applied to your elements and how to use the cascade to your advantage because, believe me, it’s a wonderful thing when you get the hang of it.

TL;DR: Jump right to the CSS order diagram for a visual of how everything works.

The cascade cares about how and where styles are written

There are a myriad of ways you can apply CSS rules to an element. Below is an example of how stroke: red; can be applied to the same element. The examples are ordered in ascending priority, where the highest priority is at the bottom:

<!-- Inheritance -->
<g style="stroke: red">
  <rect x="1" y="1" width="10" height="10" /> <!-- inherits stroke: red -->
</g>

<!-- Inline attributes -->
<rect x="1" y="1" width="10" height="10" stroke="red" />

<!-- External style sheet -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/stylesheet.css">

<!-- Embedded styles -->
<style>
  rect { stroke: red; }
</style>

<!-- Different specificity or selectors -->
rect { stroke: red; }
.myClass { stroke: red; }
#myID { stroke: red; }

<!-- Inline style -->
<g style="stroke: red"></g>

<!-- Important keyword -->
<g style="stroke: red !important"></g>

Inheritance? Embedded? External? Inline? Specificity? Important? Yeah, lots of terms being thrown around. Let’s break those down a bit because each one determines what the browser ends up using when a web page loads.

Elements can inherit styles from other elements

Both HTML and SVG elements can inherit CSS rules that are applied to other elements. We call this a parent-child relationship, where the element the CSS is applied to is the parent and the element contained inside the parent is the child.

<div class="parent">
  <div class="child">I'm the child because the parent is wrapped around me.</div>
</div>

If we set the text color of the parent and do not declare a text color on the child, then the child will look up to the parent to know what color its text should be. We call that inheritance and it’s a prime example of how a style cascades down to an element it matches… or “bubbles up” the chain to the next matched style.

However, inheritance has the lowest priority among styling methods. In other words, if a child has a rule that is specific to it, then the inherited value will be ignored, even though the inherited value may have an important keyword. The following is an example:

<div class="parent" style="color: red !important;">
  <div class="child">I'm the child because the parent is wrapped around me.</div>
</div>

See the Pen Child ignores inline inheritance with !important by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

SVG inline attributes

For SVG elements, we can also apply styles using inline attributes, where those have the second lowest priority in the cascade. This means the CSS rules in a stylesheet will be able to override them.

<rect x="1" y="1" width="10" height="10" stroke="red" />
rect {
  stroke: blue;
}

See the Pen Stylesheet overrides SVG inline attributes by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

Most SVG editors use inline attributes for portability; that is, the ability to copy some elements and paste them elsewhere without losing the attributes. Users can then use the resultant SVG and style its elements using an external stylesheet.

Stylesheets

Stylesheets are divided into two flavors: external and embedded:

<!-- External style sheet -->
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/stylesheet.css">

<!-- Embedded styles -->
<style>
  div { border: 1px solid red }
</style>

Embedded styles have the same priority as external stylesheets. Therefore, if you have the same CSS rules, ordering rules applies.

See the Pen Embedded styles override stylesheet rules by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

All stylesheets follow ordering rules, where files that are defined later, will have higher priority than those defined earlier. In this example, stylesheet-2.css will take precedence over the stylesheet-1.css file because it is defined last.

<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/stylesheet-1.css">
<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/stylesheet-2.css">

Specificity or selectors

How you select your elements will also determine which rules are applied, whereby tags (e.g. <p>, <div>), classes (e.g. .my-class) and IDs (e.g. #myI-id) have ascending priorities.

See the Pen Specificity by selectors by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

In the example above, if you have a div element with both .my-class and #my-id, the border will be red because IDs have higher priority than classes and tags.

*Specificity has higher priority than ordering rules, therefore, irrespective if your rule is at the top or bottom. Specificity still has higher priority and will be applied.

Ordering

CSS rules always prioritize from left-to-right, then from top-to-bottom.

<!-- Blue will be applied because it is on the right -->
<div style="border: 1px solid red; border: 1px solid blue;"></div> 

<style>
  div {
    border: 1px solid red;
    border: 1px solid blue; /* This will be applied because it is at the bottom */
  }
</style>

Inline styles

Inline styles have the second highest priority, just below the !important keyword. This means that inline styles are only overridden by the important keyword and nothing else. Within inline styles, normal ordering rules applies, from left-to-right and top-to-bottom.

<div style="1px solid red;"></div>

The important keyword

Speaking of the !important keyword, it is used to override ordering, specificity and inline rules. In other words, it wields incredible powers.

Overriding inline rules

<style>
  div {
    /* This beats inline styling */
    border: 1px solid orange !important;
    /* These do not */
    height: 200px;
    width: 200px;
  }
</style>

<div style="border: 1px solid red; height: 100px; width: 100px;"></div>

In the example above, without the important keyword, the div would have a red border because inline styling has higher priority than embedded styles. But, with the important keyword, the div border becomes orange, because the important keyword has higher priority than inline styling.

Using !important can be super useful, but should be used with caution. Chris has some thoughts on situations where it makes sense to use it.

Overriding specificity rules

Without the important keyword, this div border will be blue, because classes have higher priority than tags in specificity.

<style>
  /* Classes have higher priority than tags */
  .my-class {
    border: 1px solid blue;
    height: 100px;
    width: 100px;
  }
  
  div { 
    border: 1px solid red;
    height: 200px;
    width: 200px;
  }
</style>

<div class="my-class"></div>

See the Pen Classes beat tags by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

But! Adding the important keyword to the tag rules tells the element to ignore the cascade and take precedence over the class rules.

<style>
  .my-class { border: 1px solid red; }
  
  /* The important keyword overrides specificity priority */
  .my-class { border: 1px solid blue !important; }
</style>

<div class="my-class"></div>

See the Pen !important ignores the cascade by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

Overriding ordering rules

OK, so we’ve already talked about how the order of rules affects specificity: bottom beats top and right beats left. The surefire way to override that is to put !important into use once again.

In this example, the div will take the red border, even though the blue border is the bottom rule. You can thank !important for that handiwork.

<style>
  div { border: 1px solid red !important; } /* This wins, despite the ordering */
  div { border: 1px solid blue; }
</style>

<div></div>

See the Pen Important wins over ordering by Geoff Graham (@geoffgraham) on CodePen.

Visualizing the cascade

Who knew there was so much meaning in the “C” of CSS? We covered a ton of ground here and hopefully it helps clarify the way styles are affected and applied by how we write them. The cascade is a powerful feature. There are opinions galore about how to use it properly, but you can see the various ways properties are passed and inherited by elements.

More of a visual learner? Here’s a chart that pulls it all together.

Download chart