: This aligns the element (often an icon, image, or text container) to the top of its parent line, ensuring layout consistency among neighboring elements [1].
Large-scale web applications like Google use "CSS-in-JS" or automated build tools that "minify" and "hash" class names. This serves two main purposes:
: This changes the mouse cursor to a hand icon, signaling to the user that the element is clickable [1]. Why do sites use names like this?
Because it is a machine-generated class name, its specific name (the string "b3MoKnAh") is not meaningful and can change frequently as Google updates its code. However, the properties assigned to it provide insight into its function: