You have to put the # in front of all the ids
in CSS. For you to understand better pq your CSS didn’t work I write it differently by putting a ID
on each line, as suggested by Google’s own manual for example https://google.github.io/styleguide/htmlcssguide.html#Selector_and_Declaration_Separation:
#label1,
#label2,
#label3,
#label4 {
color: #FFFFFF;
text-align:left;
font-style: italic;
}
Now it is easier for you to notice the need to put kbd># in front of each name id
That other question about ID
may interest you have several interesting things there Why it is considered wrong/bad to repeat an HTML ID?
Now about what I suggest to you and not using the ID
to put style in elements. I suggest you put classes, even if the element already has a ID
, for IDs
are unique and as you saw you need to declare in CSS 4 ids
to use the same style, and with the .classe
you only need one .classe
which will be applied in labels
. Here is a question that also worth you stop to read, will help you for the rest of dev’s life: What should I use in CSS, id or class?
Then you’d have something like this:
.class-label {
color: #FF0000;
text-align:left;
font-style: italic;
}
<table>
<tr>
<td><label class="class-label" for="nome1" id="label1">Jogador 1</label></td>
<td><input type="text" name="nome1" id="nome1"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><label class="class-label" for="nome2" id="label1">Jogador 2</label></td>
<td><input type="text" name="nome2"></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td><label class="class-label" for="nome3" id="label1">Jogador 3</label></td>
<td><input type="text" name="nome3" id="nome3"></td>
...
</table>
TIP
This part is just a hint, just other methods for you to get all the Abels, but already I say that to use them you need to know exactly what you are doing or you may have class hierarchy problems, class conflicts, etc...
This CSS definition takes all label
that are within a table
table label {
color: #FF0000;
text-align:left;
font-style: italic;
}
This definition takes all label
that I have an attribute ID
independent of the name of ID
label[id] {
color: #ff0;
text-align:left;
font-style: italic;
}
And that definition takes all the labels
of the document.
label {
color: #ff0;
text-align:left;
font-style: italic;
}
But as I said, before you go out using CSS in this way read the manual I mentioned at the beginning of the answer, and also read the other links, will help you a lot. About class hierarchy you MUST read this: Which css selector has priority?