When a user hovers their mouse over this element, the arrow cursor changes into a "hand" icon.
It tells the user, "Hey, you can click this!" It’s essential for making non-button elements (like a or a ) feel interactive and intuitive. The "Why" Behind the Name
Here is a quick "cheat sheet" blog post to help you understand what those specific styles are doing to your elements. .aToQxmmj { vertical-align:top; cursor: pointe...
This property controls how an element sits next to others on the same line.
Are you trying to this specific style on a website, or are you setting up a build tool that generates these names? When a user hovers their mouse over this
It aligns the top of the element with the top of the tallest element on the line.
If you are trying to override this style in your own stylesheet, you might need to use a more specific selector or the !important flag, because these generated classes often have high priority. This property controls how an element sits next
When you see a class name like .aToQxmmj , your first instinct might be "What is this?" Don’t worry about the name; look at the properties. Here’s a breakdown of the two rules you found:
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