For example (*), I want to change the color of * to red using css.
It is too much work to manually add styles to each one. The project is very old and there are countless pages.
I seem to have seen a related post before, and I don’t know what any good solutions are?
Call external CSS files. . .
You need to find a file replacement tool for this.
There must be rules for styles with *, otherwise it will be a nightmare.
Multiple pages call the same css
is calling the same css, but how to write it? You can’t add * to all pages.
The rule is (*). Turn * into red.
is calling the same css, but how to write it? You can’t add * to class in all pages.
The rule is (*). Turn * into red. Write a css external file. . Then call
. For example, there are 1000 pages, and each page has a lot of (*). Do not add a separate label to the *.
These 1000 pages all reference a css file, and styles can only be written in this css file. Can this be done?
Or use jquery?
Quoting the reply from xiaobadi on the 4th floor:
is calling the same css, but how to write it? You can’t add * to class in all pages.
The rule is (*). Turn * into red.
Write a css external file. . Then call
how to write it, please give me some advice~~Thank you
Quoting the reply from xiaobadi on the 4th floor:
calls the same css, but how to write it cannot be in all pages Go ahead and add * to class.
The rule is (*). Turn * into red.
Write a css external file. . Then call
Now each page references a css file. How to write it in this css file?
selector { color:red !important;}
selector { color :red !important;}
This brother and I are engaged in java coding and don’t know much about css. Can you elaborate
For example, you want to change the
in
css. test {value}
Now each page references a css file, then write
.test{ color:red !important; }
selector { color:red !important;}
I just want to change the * to red.
Don’t
Faint What does the original poster mean?
You need to find a file batch replacement tool for this.
Find (*) and replace it with (*)
Then add
.tip-red { color:red; }
to the commonly referenced css. This will inevitably replace the (*) in the non-form.
Wow, replacement is too risky.
Isn’t it possible to do it with css? I remember seeing a post before that seemed to be possible, or is it possible to write it in js?
If css can’t do it, I want to write a js, first read all the contents in the table to see if it contains (*), ps: including * alone may replace the wrong
and then put ( *) is replaced with (*)
Does this work?
After the page is loaded, $(".first") returns an array (if there are several .firsts on a page) $(".first").html() gets the text value.repalce() (*) Replace with * and reassign it to the .first node array. Use CSS later to change the color to red.