You can also give style information for the exported file. The HTML exporter assigns the following special CSS classes1 to appropriate parts of the document—your style specifications may change these, in addition to any of the standard classes like for headlines, tables, etc.
p.author author information, including email
p.date publishing date
p.creator creator info, about org-mode version
.title document title
.todo TODO keywords, all not-done states
.done the DONE keywords, all stated the count as done
.WAITING each TODO keyword also uses a class named after itself
.timestamp timestamp
.timestamp-kwd keyword associated with a timestamp, like SCHEDULED
.timestamp-wrapper span around keyword plus timestamp
.tag tag in a headline
._HOME each tag uses itself as a class, "@" replaced by "_"
.target target for links
.linenr the line number in a code example
.code-highlighted for highlighting referenced code lines
div.outline-N div for outline level N (headline plus text))
div.outline-text-N extra div for text at outline level N
.section-number-N section number in headlines, different for each level
div.figure how to format an inlined image
pre.src formatted source code
pre.example normal example
p.verse verse paragraph
div.footnotes footnote section headline
p.footnote footnote definition paragraph, containing a footnote
.footref a footnote reference number (always a <sup>)
.footnum footnote number in footnote definition (always <sup>)
Each
exported file contains a compact default style that defines these
classes in a basic way2. You may overwrite these settings, or
add to them by using the variables
org-export-html-style (for Org-wide settings) and
org-export-html-style-extra (for more fine-grained
settings, like file-local settings). To set the latter variable
individually for each file, you can use
#+STYLE: <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="stylesheet.css" />
For longer style definitions, you can use
several such lines. You could also directly write a
<style> </style> section in
this way, without referring to an external file.
In order to add styles to a subtree, use the
:HTML_CONTAINER_CLASS: property to assign a class to
the tree. In order to specify CSS styles for a particular
headline, you can use the id specified in a
:CUSTOM_ID: property.
[1] If the classes on TODO keywords and tags
lead to conflicts, use the variables
org-export-html-todo-kwd-class-prefix and
org-export-html-tag-class-prefix to make them
unique.
[2] This style is defined in the constant
org-export-html-style-default, which you should
not modify. To turn inclusion of these defaults off, customize
org-export-html-style-include-default