A ; text-transform
random freebies.hey. so the scheduler i made was some kind of effective(?). dunno.
so text-transform lets you automatically leave your letters uppercase, even without using your capslock key. the lowercase value is -- uh, idk. i mean i type in lowercase letters a whole lot.
text-transform is honestly quite stylish. i've used it a lot and i'm currently using it on my layouts. though it is a bit of an eyesore, i still like it. so, on to its use. text-transform is for transforming your letters, words, sentences, or paragraphs into either UPPERCASE or lowercase -- can't get any lower than that, without pressing on your shift key or leaving your capslock key on.
like, for example, you discovered that you wanted your text to be in uppercase, because lowercase letters looked too plain and you've already typed all the paragraphs you needed to type -- text-transform is the answer to that.
the next question is -- where do we put that property? you can either add it to the current [div] of the paragraph or [span]. it honestly doesn't matter, but the way you use it depends on how it will function. if the division you put the property in(? -- does it make sense imsosorry) has a whole bunch of other divisions inside it and all of it has paragraphs inside, all of it will either become uppercase or lowercase.
so text-transform lets you automatically leave your letters uppercase, even without using your capslock key. the lowercase value is -- uh, idk. i mean i type in lowercase letters a whole lot.
text-transform is honestly quite stylish. i've used it a lot and i'm currently using it on my layouts. though it is a bit of an eyesore, i still like it. so, on to its use. text-transform is for transforming your letters, words, sentences, or paragraphs into either UPPERCASE or lowercase -- can't get any lower than that, without pressing on your shift key or leaving your capslock key on.
like, for example, you discovered that you wanted your text to be in uppercase, because lowercase letters looked too plain and you've already typed all the paragraphs you needed to type -- text-transform is the answer to that.
the next question is -- where do we put that property? you can either add it to the current [div] of the paragraph or [span]. it honestly doesn't matter, but the way you use it depends on how it will function. if the division you put the property in(? -- does it make sense imsosorry) has a whole bunch of other divisions inside it and all of it has paragraphs inside, all of it will either become uppercase or lowercase.
[mama div style = "text-transform : uppercase ;"] [baby div] goo goo gah gah [/baby div] [baby div style="text-transform : lowercase; "> goo goo gah gah [/baby div] [baby div] goo goo gah gah [/baby div] [/mama div]
goo goo gah gah
goo goo gah gah
goo goo gah gah
yes, that's what i'm trying to explain -- minus the mama div and baby div. or you can just put it in the span tag. up to you.
mama - main div ;
baby - sub divs btw
that's all for now. ta-ta. o/
mama - main div ;
baby - sub divs btw
that's all for now. ta-ta. o/
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