> Hello all,
> 
>       I want to override a style using CSS for one of my HTML files, which is

Yes, indeed you can.
If you already have the stylesheet, then simply set the 
 $STYLESHEET variable to a URL for it.
Do this in the .latex2html-init file.
Of course, this will apply to every page of a multi-page HTML document.

>       generated from a corresponding TeX file. Right now I am setting the style
>       using <STYLE> tags in the "sub meta_information" setting in
>       .latex2html-init, but that means it ends up in *all* HTML files. I want to
>       have be able to set it in just the one TeX file. Is there a way?

Here are two ways that I can think of to have special styles applicable on just one 
page:

 1.  process that page as a separate document to the rest.

or 

 2.  use the  \begin[<name>]{<environment>}  syntax,
     to include  CLASS="<name>" attributes in some tags,
     for appropriate environments on that special page.
     Let your CSS stylesheet apply styles for these CLASS names.
 
> 
>       Alternatively it would also be good if I could set the STYLE globally like I
>       am now, but use a class (f.e. TD.justtheonefile) and then being able to
>       somehow make all the TD tags in the one result file have the
>       class="justtheonefile" property.

Yes.
Do this in the LaTeX via:

   \begin[justtheonefile]{tabular}{.....


and in the CSS have a rule such as:

   TABLE.justtheonefile TD  { background-color:#cccccc ; color:#ff0000 ; ...... }


Hope this helps,

        Ross Moore

> 
> -- 
> Michel A. de Bree
> mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> 

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