For example, if I write:
background-color: black;
color: white;
or
color: white;
background-color: black;
Is there any difference between the two and should I care about order?
No. You can write them in any order. In the case of duplicates within the same selector, the last rule wins.
p {
color:blue;
color:red;
color:green; /* Green wins */
}
When dealing with multiple selectors, rules that come later will override earlier rules, unless the earlier selector is more specific.
For example, this code will turn all your paragraphs green:
p { color:red; }
/* ... */
p { color:green; }
While this code will turn all your paragraphs red, because the first selector is more specific.
body p { color:red; }
/* ... */
p { color:green; }
While the order of rules within a selector may not matter, I would take care to write them in a predictable order (position rules before sizing rules before colouring rules, for example) simply to make your CSS consistent and slightly more pleasant to maintain.
In your example there is no difference, however ordering can matter but only in rare instances.
For example, it can sometimes be common to do:
display: block;
display: inline-block;
The parser will always interpret from top to bottom when the styles are in the same rule. In this case inline-block overwrites block because the property is the same name.
However:
ul li{
font-size: 14px;
}
ul{
font-size: 12px;
}
In this case, even though the 12px comes after the 14px in the rules, the text in list item elements will be 14px because of the higher precedence of the selector ul li over ul
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