/* * Copyright (c) 2000 World Wide Web Consortium, * (Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Institut National de * Recherche en Informatique et en Automatique, Keio University). All * Rights Reserved. This program is distributed under the W3C's Software * Intellectual Property License. This program is distributed in the * hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even * the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR * PURPOSE. * See W3C License http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/ for more details. */ package org.w3c.dom.stylesheets; import org.w3c.dom.Node; /** * The StyleSheet interface is the abstract base interface for * any type of style sheet. It represents a single style sheet associated * with a structured document. In HTML, the StyleSheet interface represents * either an external style sheet, included via the HTML LINK element, or * an inline STYLE element. In XML, this interface represents an external * style sheet, included via a style sheet processing instruction. *

See also the Document Object Model (DOM) Level 2 Style Specification. * @since DOM Level 2 */ public interface StyleSheet { /** * This specifies the style sheet language for this style sheet. The * style sheet language is specified as a content type (e.g. * "text/css"). The content type is often specified in the * ownerNode. Also see the type attribute definition for * the LINK element in HTML 4.0, and the type * pseudo-attribute for the XML style sheet processing instruction. */ public String getType(); /** * false if the style sheet is applied to the document. * true if it is not. Modifying this attribute may cause a * new resolution of style for the document. A stylesheet only applies * if both an appropriate medium definition is present and the disabled * attribute is false. So, if the media doesn't apply to the current * user agent, the disabled attribute is ignored. */ public boolean getDisabled(); /** * false if the style sheet is applied to the document. * true if it is not. Modifying this attribute may cause a * new resolution of style for the document. A stylesheet only applies * if both an appropriate medium definition is present and the disabled * attribute is false. So, if the media doesn't apply to the current * user agent, the disabled attribute is ignored. */ public void setDisabled(boolean disabled); /** * The node that associates this style sheet with the document. For HTML, * this may be the corresponding LINK or STYLE * element. For XML, it may be the linking processing instruction. For * style sheets that are included by other style sheets, the value of * this attribute is null. */ public Node getOwnerNode(); /** * For style sheet languages that support the concept of style sheet * inclusion, this attribute represents the including style sheet, if * one exists. If the style sheet is a top-level style sheet, or the * style sheet language does not support inclusion, the value of this * attribute is null. */ public StyleSheet getParentStyleSheet(); /** * If the style sheet is a linked style sheet, the value of its attribute * is its location. For inline style sheets, the value of this attribute * is null. See the href attribute definition for the * LINK element in HTML 4.0, and the href pseudo-attribute * for the XML style sheet processing instruction. */ public String getHref(); /** * The advisory title. The title is often specified in the * ownerNode. See the title attribute definition for the * LINK element in HTML 4.0, and the title pseudo-attribute * for the XML style sheet processing instruction. */ public String getTitle(); /** * The intended destination media for style information. The media is * often specified in the ownerNode. If no media has been * specified, the MediaList will be empty. See the media * attribute definition for the LINK element in HTML 4.0, * and the media pseudo-attribute for the XML style sheet processing * instruction . Modifying the media list may cause a change to the * attribute disabled. */ public MediaList getMedia(); }