I have an element with two classes, one called "rotate" that will rotate the element 360 degrees and another called "doublesize" that will scale the element 2x its normal size:
.rotate {
transform: rotate(0deg);
}
.rotate:hover {
transform: rotate(360deg);
}
.doublesize {
transform: scale(1);
}
.doublesize:hover {
transform: scale(2);
}
I'm guessing this does not work because the classes override each other's transform
property?
I know that I could easily do this in one CSS rule like:
.doublerotatesize {
transform: scale(1) rotate(0deg);
}
.doublerotatesize:hover {
transform: scale(2) rotate(360deg);
}
But I would like to be able to apply each class separately from the other if it is possible.
I'm guessing this does not work because the classes override each other's
transform
property?
Correct. This is an unfortunate limitation as a side-effect of how the cascade works.
You will have to specify both functions in a single transform
declaration. You could simply chain both class selectors together instead of creating a new class for a combined transform:
.doublesize.rotate {
-webkit-transform: scale(1) rotate(0deg);
}
.doublesize.rotate:hover {
-webkit-transform: scale(2) rotate(360deg);
}
... but as you can see, the issue lies in the transform
property rather than in the selector.
This is expected to be rectified in Transforms level 2, where each transform has been promoted to its own property, which would allow you to combine transforms simply by declaring them separately as you would any other combination of CSS properties. This means you would be able to simply do this:
/* Note that rotate: 0deg and scale: 1 are omitted
as they're the initial values */
.rotate:hover {
rotate: 360deg;
}
.doublesize:hover {
scale: 2;
}
... and take advantage of the cascade rather than be hindered by it. No need for specialized class names or combined CSS rules.