The perspective CSS property gives an element a 3D-space by affecting the distance between the Z plane and the user. The strength of the effect is determined by the value. The smaller the value, the closer you get from the Z plane and the more impressive the visual effect. The greater the value, the more
Properties
There isn’t an actual page-break property in CSS. It is actually a set of 3 properties: page-break-before, page-break-after and page-break-inside. These properties help define how the document is supposed to behave when printed. For example, to make a printed document more book-like. Properties page-break-before The page-break-before property adds a page-break before the element to which
The padding property in CSS defines the innermost portion of the box model, creating space around an element’s content, inside of any defined margins and/or borders. Padding values are set using lengths or percentages, and cannot accept negative values. The initial, or default, value for all padding properties is 0. Here’s a simple example: .box
div { overflow: visible | hidden | scroll | auto | inherit } The overflow property controls what happens to content that breaks outside of its bounds. The default value is visible. So imagine a div in which you’ve explicitly set to be 200px wide, but contains an image that is 300px wide. That image