Simple Rounded Box

The box in the first example creates a simple expandable rounded box filled with a solid color, as shown in Figure 24-8.

Simple box with rounded corners

Figure 24-8. Simple box with rounded corners

Tip

These separate images could be combined into a single image file and applied in varying positions to each corner of the box. The advantage is the need to load or preload only one image, as opposed to four. This technique is discussed in more detail in the upcoming "CSS Rollovers" section.

This technique takes four image files (one for each corner) and applies them as background images to four elements in the markup. Figure 24-9 shows each image file used in the example.

The corner graphics for the simple box

Figure 24-9. The corner graphics for the simple box

The trick is making sure that the markup has four available elements for background image placement. This is what CSS designers commonly refer to as finding hooks in the markup to which styles can be applied. If your document structure has fewer than four elements, it may be necessary to add a div or two to get the necessary number of hooks (see note below). This generic, all-purpose example is created entirely out of divs, but it is preferable to use actual elements that have been marked up semantically.

 <div class="box"> <div class="top"> <div></div> </div>   <div class="content"> <h1>Header</h1> ...

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