CSS Color Keywords
This page will explain the transparent, currentcolor,
and
inherit keywords.
The transparent Keyword
The transparent keyword is used to make a
color transparent. This is often used to make a transparent background color for
an element.
Example
Here, the background color of the <div> element will be fully
transparent, and the background image will show through:
body { background-image: url("paper.gif");}div {
background-color: transparent;}
Try it Yourself »
Note: The transparent
keyword is equivalent to rgba(0,0,0,0). RGBA color values are an extension of
RGB color values with an alpha channel - which specifies the opacity for a
color. Read more in our CSS RGB chapter and in
our CSS Colors chapter.
The currentcolor Keyword
The currentcolor keyword is like a variable
that holds the current value of the color property of an element.
This keyword can be useful if you want a specific color to be consistent in an
element or a page.
Example
In this example the border color of the <div> element will be blue, because the
text color of the <div> element is blue:
div { color: blue; border: 10px solid currentcolor;}
Try it Yourself »
Example
In this example the <div>'s background color is set to the current color
value of the body element:
body { color: purple;}div { background-color:
currentcolor;}
Try it Yourself »
Example
In this example the <div>'s border color and shadow color is set to
the current color value of the body element:
body { color: green;}div { box-shadow: 0px 0px
15px currentcolor; border: 5px solid currentcolor;}
Try it Yourself »
The inherit Keyword
The inherit keyword specifies that a
property should inherit its value from its parent element.
The inherit keyword can be used for any CSS
property, and on any HTML element.
Example
In this example the <span>'s border settings will be inherited from
the parent element:
div { border: 2px solid red;}span { border:
inherit;}
Try it Yourself »
★
+1
Reference: https://www.w3schools.com/css/css_colors_keywords.asp