The quotes property in CSS allows you to specify which types of quotes are used when quotes are added via the content: open-quote; or content: close-quote; rules. Here’s how to use it: q { quotes: “%u201C” “%u201D” “%u2018” “%u2019”; } q:before { content: open-quote; } q:after { content: close-quote; } In the example above, four
CSS
div { position: static; /* Default, no need to set unless forcing back into this state. */ } div { position: relative; } div { position: absolute; } div { position: fixed; } div { position: inherit; /* Take value from parent */ } The position value in CSS deals with layout and manipulating elements
The pointer-events property allows for control over how HTML elements respond to mouse/touch events – including CSS hover/active states, click/tap events in Javascript, and whether or not the cursor is visible. .avoid-clicks { pointer-events: none; } While the pointer-events property takes eleven possible values, all but three of them are reserved for use with SVG.
The perspective-origin property determines the origin for the perspective property. Think of it as the vanishing point of the current 3D-space. Note as for the perspective property, perspective-origin has to be defined on the parent element in order to give the transformed children depth. The perspective-origin property doesn’t do anything by itself. It has to