| org.w3c.dom.stylesheets.StyleSheet | 
|  Known Indirect Subclasses | 
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.
| Public Methods | |||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| falseif the style sheet is applied to the document. | |||||||||||
| If the style sheet is a linked style sheet, the value of its attribute
 is its location. | |||||||||||
| The intended destination media for style information. | |||||||||||
| The node that associates this style sheet with the document. | |||||||||||
| For style sheet languages that support the concept of style sheet
 inclusion, this attribute represents the including style sheet, if
 one exists. | |||||||||||
| The advisory title. | |||||||||||
| This specifies the style sheet language for this style sheet. | |||||||||||
| falseif the style sheet is applied to the document. | |||||||||||
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.