Appearance

Appearance

Can I use ?Can I use ?
classproperties
appearance:valueappearance: value
appearance:noneappearance: none
appearance:autoappearance: auto
appearance:menulist-buttonappearance: menulist-button
appearance:textfieldappearance: textfield
appearance:buttonappearance: button
appearance:searchfieldappearance: searchfield
appearance:textareaappearance: textarea
appearance:push-buttonappearance: push-button
appearance:slider-horizontalappearance: slider-horizontal
appearance:checkboxappearance: checkbox
appearance:square-buttonappearance: square-button
appearance:menulistappearance: menulist
appearance:listboxappearance: listbox
appearance:meterappearance: meter
appearance:progress-barappearance: progress-bar

Overview

The appearance CSS property is used to display an element using platform-native styling, based on the operating system’s theme.

Applying with functions

<div class="appearance:$(value)">...</div>

Master supports native CSS variables and functions, just add var(--key) or use shorthand$(key) for variables.

You can also use calc(expression), env(expression) and other CSS functions if the property supports it.

To learn more, see the Functions documentation.

Conditionally apply

States and selectors

<div class="appearance:auto:hover">...</div>

Master supports all native CSS selectors, just add :hover, :disabled, chaining, combinators and other CSS selectors as usual.

To learn more, see the Selectors documentation.

Responsive breakpoints

<div class="appearance:auto@sm">...</div>

Responsive breakpoints can be applied to all styles. Some available breakpoints are 3xs, 2xs, xs, sm,md, lg, xl, 2xl, 3xl, 4xl. Arbitrary breakpoints can be specified through comparison operators >, >=, <, <=.

To learn more, see the Breakpoints documentation.

<div class="appearance:auto@sm">...</div>

Master supports media types like print, screen, speech, all, and other media queries.

To learn more, see the Media Queries documentation.

Dark mode and color schemes

<div class="appearance:auto@dark">...</div>

Master uses the selector html.dark to support color schemes. Now, you can easily fine-tune your style for the color schemes.

To learn more, see the Color Schemes documentation.


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