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The Aldrich templates include a number of styles that are available for you to use in WYSIWYG content and in your customizations.

How these work

Using a these styles requires you to apply one or more classes to your desired element.

Applying classes in code / customizations

Add space separated values to the class attribute of your desired element.

<button class="button button--outline button--blue">I'm a button</button>

The above example defines a button with a blue outline by applying three classes:

  1. button

  2. button--outline

  3. button--blue

Applying classes to WYSIWYG content

You can access a list of all available classes in two (very similar) ways:

From the WYSIWYG menu bar, select Format > Formats > Custom

accessing classes from the wysiwyg menu bar

Alternatively, you can access the same list from the WYSIWYG tool bar instead: Formats > Custom

accessing classes from the wysiwyg tool bar

From the list of classes, select the ones you want to apply. Currently applied class will appear in the list with a gray bar to the left of the class name.

selected classes

You will also notice that the WYSIWYG will (in most, but not all cases) display the effects of applying the selected classes in its preview window. In the pictured example, three classes are applied to the word Lorem,

Not all WYSIWYGs offer access to the list of classes (e.g., the footer). This is by design.

Available styles

Buttons

All buttons require the base class button combined with two modifier classes. One modifier class will define the button as solid vs. outline, and the second modifier class will define the button’s color.

Button classes can be applied to both button and link elements (<button> and <a>, respectively).

Modifier class

What this does

Notes

button--outline

Button type modifier. Defines an outlined button.

Do not combine with other button type modifier classes.

button--solid

Button type modifier. Defines a solid button.

Do not combine with other button type modifier classes.

button--blue

Color modifier. Colors the button blue.

Do not combine with other color modifiers.

button--gold

Color modifier. Colors the button gold.

Do not combine with other color modifiers.

button--gray

Color modifier. Colors the button gray.

Do not combine with other color modifiers.

Examples

outline blue button
<button class="button button--outline button-blue">button</button>
solid gold button
<a href="..." class="button button--solid button--gold">link</a>

Images

Image classes are used to align your images within surrounding content and require the base class image combined with a alignment modifier class.

Image classes can be used with both image and figure elements (<img> and <figure>, respectively)

Modifier class

image--align-center

Centers the image on its own line.

Do not combine with other alignment modifiers.

image--align-left

Aligns the image left with surrounding content wrapping around the image’s right side.

Do not combine with other alignment modifiers.

image--align-right

Aligns the image righ with surrounding content wrapping around the image’s left side.

Do not combine with other alignment modifiers.

Examples

center aligned image
<img src="..." alt="..." class="image image--align-center"/>
left aligned image
<img src="..." alt="..." class="image image--align-left"/>
right aligned figure
<figure class="image image--align-right">
  <img src="..." alt="..."/>
  <figcaption>Caption</figcaption>
</figure>

It can be difficult at times to determine exactly which element you’re applying classes to in WYSIWYGs. When working with figure elements, things will turn out weird if the image classes are applied to the nested image element instead of the figure element itself. To select a figure element in a WYSIWYG, click on the outside edge of the figure, rather than the image within it or the caption.

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