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Home/ Questions/Q 6826081
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 26, 20262026-05-26T22:06:20+00:00 2026-05-26T22:06:20+00:00

Suppose a HTML like this: <div id=header> <span class=title>Title</span> <!– more spans and other

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Suppose a HTML like this:

<div id="header">
  <span class="title">Title</span>
  <!-- more spans and other things here -->
</div>

This would work together with a nested CSS:

#header .title { /* CSS */ }

This works of course, but I don’t like the usage of class here. As I need the style title only once, I would like to use an id. But then the name would have to be something like header_title (since I might have other titles in the HTML), resulting in a CSS

#header #header_title { /* CSS */ }

Now this seems to defeat the purpose of nested CSS, then I could just drop the first #header completely.

I can’t really figure out a way to do this “right”. Am I missing something, or do I just have to live with some “dirty” code here?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-26T22:06:21+00:00Added an answer on May 26, 2026 at 10:06 pm

    It actually doesn’t really matter.

    What matters about your markup is that it’s readable; HTML is about being semantic, so that your markup represents your content. By doing so, if you come back to your HTML a few months later without touching it, you should be able to quickly pick up on what on earth you wrote 🙂

    Semantically, #header .title makes a lot more sense to me over #header #header_title, for two reasons; one, since it’s easier to read, and two, since the purpose of ids is, well, to identify! You could use #header_title by itself, but it’s much cleaner to limit the amount of ids you have.

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