Guide To My Country 1.0

Styling the Menu Bar

With CSS, the possibilities for making your menu bar look great are endless.

  • Move to the styles.css file again — the place where the cool stuff happens!

  • Find your nav ul selector, and add more rules so that it looks like this:

nav ul {
  background-color: tomato;
  border-style: solid;
  border-color: MediumVioletRed;
  border-width: 2px;
  padding: 10px;
}

The padding property adds space. Can you work out what each of the other properties do? Try experimenting with different colours and numbers of pixels.

Menu bar with borders and padding added

  • To get rid of the underlining of the links, add the following code on a new line after the closing curly brace } for the nav ul li rules. You could put it after any }, but it’s a good idea to keep related stuff together so it’s easier to find!
nav ul li a {
    text-decoration: none;
}

The above rule applies to links <a> inside list items <li> in an unordered list <ul> inside a navigation section <nav>. Wow, that’s four selectors!

Menu bar with link underlining removed

Remember how you removed the link tags from some list items in the <nav> so you can easily see what page you’re on? Why not also change the text colour of those navigation list items which are not links!

  • Find your nav ul li selector, and inside the curly braces add the line:
color: PapayaWhip;

You can choose any colour you like!

You can add the color property to the nav ul li a rule as well if you want the menu links to be a different colour from other links on your website.

  • How about some rounded corners for your menu? Try adding the following code to the nav ul rule to see what happens: border-radius: 10px;.

The border-radius property is a really easy way to make anything look cooler!

Webpage with rounded corners on the menu bar and on a picture

Challenge: make your pictures have rounded corners

  • In your style sheet, create a new set of rules for pictures using the img selector, and add in a border-radius rule there.