What I would like to do (not in IE obviously) is:
p:not(.list):last-child + :text {
margin-bottom: 10px;
}
Which would give a text node a margin. (Is that even possible?) How would I get the text node with CSS?
Text nodes cannot have margins or any other style applied to them, so anything you need style applied to must be in an element. If you want some of the text inside of your element to be styled differently, wrap it in a span or div, for example.
You cannot target text nodes with CSS. I'm with you; I wish you could... but you can't :(
If you don't wrap the text node in a <span> like #Jacob suggests, you could instead give the surrounding element padding as opposed to margin:
HTML
<p id="theParagraph">The text node!</p>
CSS
p#theParagraph
{
border: 1px solid red;
padding-bottom: 10px;
}
Text nodes (not wrapped within specific tags) can now be targeted in very specific use cases using the ::target-text pseudoelement selector. A query parameter (url-encoded; e.g. whitespace must be encoded as %20) that matches a string of text can be styled like this:
::target-text { /* color, background color, etc */ }
Just like other highlight pseudoelements, only certain style properties are supported, as listed here.
There is a demo for this (parent link is on the MDN page for ::target-text). Change the query parameter string for 'text' to different strings to see how different text becomes styled.
One limitation of the ::target-text pseudoelement selector is that only the first matching string of text can be styled. In addition, at 67.8%, browser support is modest as of January 2022.
Related
What I would like to do (not in IE obviously) is:
p:not(.list):last-child + :text {
margin-bottom: 10px;
}
Which would give a text node a margin. (Is that even possible?) How would I get the text node with CSS?
Text nodes cannot have margins or any other style applied to them, so anything you need style applied to must be in an element. If you want some of the text inside of your element to be styled differently, wrap it in a span or div, for example.
You cannot target text nodes with CSS. I'm with you; I wish you could... but you can't :(
If you don't wrap the text node in a <span> like #Jacob suggests, you could instead give the surrounding element padding as opposed to margin:
HTML
<p id="theParagraph">The text node!</p>
CSS
p#theParagraph
{
border: 1px solid red;
padding-bottom: 10px;
}
Text nodes (not wrapped within specific tags) can now be targeted in very specific use cases using the ::target-text pseudoelement selector. A query parameter (url-encoded; e.g. whitespace must be encoded as %20) that matches a string of text can be styled like this:
::target-text { /* color, background color, etc */ }
Just like other highlight pseudoelements, only certain style properties are supported, as listed here.
There is a demo for this (parent link is on the MDN page for ::target-text). Change the query parameter string for 'text' to different strings to see how different text becomes styled.
One limitation of the ::target-text pseudoelement selector is that only the first matching string of text can be styled. In addition, at 67.8%, browser support is modest as of January 2022.
What I would like to do (not in IE obviously) is:
p:not(.list):last-child + :text {
margin-bottom: 10px;
}
Which would give a text node a margin. (Is that even possible?) How would I get the text node with CSS?
Text nodes cannot have margins or any other style applied to them, so anything you need style applied to must be in an element. If you want some of the text inside of your element to be styled differently, wrap it in a span or div, for example.
You cannot target text nodes with CSS. I'm with you; I wish you could... but you can't :(
If you don't wrap the text node in a <span> like #Jacob suggests, you could instead give the surrounding element padding as opposed to margin:
HTML
<p id="theParagraph">The text node!</p>
CSS
p#theParagraph
{
border: 1px solid red;
padding-bottom: 10px;
}
Text nodes (not wrapped within specific tags) can now be targeted in very specific use cases using the ::target-text pseudoelement selector. A query parameter (url-encoded; e.g. whitespace must be encoded as %20) that matches a string of text can be styled like this:
::target-text { /* color, background color, etc */ }
Just like other highlight pseudoelements, only certain style properties are supported, as listed here.
There is a demo for this (parent link is on the MDN page for ::target-text). Change the query parameter string for 'text' to different strings to see how different text becomes styled.
One limitation of the ::target-text pseudoelement selector is that only the first matching string of text can be styled. In addition, at 67.8%, browser support is modest as of January 2022.
What I would like to do (not in IE obviously) is:
p:not(.list):last-child + :text {
margin-bottom: 10px;
}
Which would give a text node a margin. (Is that even possible?) How would I get the text node with CSS?
Text nodes cannot have margins or any other style applied to them, so anything you need style applied to must be in an element. If you want some of the text inside of your element to be styled differently, wrap it in a span or div, for example.
You cannot target text nodes with CSS. I'm with you; I wish you could... but you can't :(
If you don't wrap the text node in a <span> like #Jacob suggests, you could instead give the surrounding element padding as opposed to margin:
HTML
<p id="theParagraph">The text node!</p>
CSS
p#theParagraph
{
border: 1px solid red;
padding-bottom: 10px;
}
Text nodes (not wrapped within specific tags) can now be targeted in very specific use cases using the ::target-text pseudoelement selector. A query parameter (url-encoded; e.g. whitespace must be encoded as %20) that matches a string of text can be styled like this:
::target-text { /* color, background color, etc */ }
Just like other highlight pseudoelements, only certain style properties are supported, as listed here.
There is a demo for this (parent link is on the MDN page for ::target-text). Change the query parameter string for 'text' to different strings to see how different text becomes styled.
One limitation of the ::target-text pseudoelement selector is that only the first matching string of text can be styled. In addition, at 67.8%, browser support is modest as of January 2022.
Given the following scenario, why does the :after selector require a content property to function?
.test {
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
background: blue;
position:relative;
}
.test:after {
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
background: red;
display: block;
position: absolute;
top: 0px;
left: 20px;
}
<div class="test"></div>
Notice how you do not see the pseudo element until you specify the content property:
.test {
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
background: blue;
position:relative;
}
.test:after {
width: 20px;
height: 20px;
background: red;
display: block;
position: absolute;
top: 0px;
left: 20px;
content:"hi";
}
<div class="test"></div>
Why is this the intended functionality? You would think that the display block would force the element to show up. Oddly enough, you can actually see the styles inside web debuggers; however, they do not display on the page.
Here are some references to various W3C specifications and drafts:
Selectors Level 3
The :before and :after pseudo-elements can be used to insert generated content before or after an element's content.
The :before and :after pseudo-elements
Authors specify the style and location of generated content with the :before and :after pseudo-elements. As their names indicate, the :before and :after pseudo-elements specify the location of content before and after an element's document tree content. The content property, in conjunction with these pseudo-elements, specifies what is inserted.
The content attribute
Initial: none
This property is used with the :before and :after pseudo-elements to generate content in a document. Values have the following meanings:
none - The pseudo-element is not generated.
The styling applied to ::before and ::after pseudo-elements affects the display of the generated content. The content attribute is this generated content, and without it present, the default value of content: none is assumed, meaning there is nothing for the style to be applied to.
If you don't want to repeat content:''; multiple times, you can override this simply by globally styling all ::before and ::after pseudo-elements within your CSS (JSFiddle example):
::before, ::after {
content:'';
}
The reason you need a content: '' declaration for each ::before and/or ::after pseudo-element is because the initial value of content is normal, which computes to none on the ::before and ::after pseudo-elements. See the spec.
The reason the initial value of content isn't an empty string but a value that computes to none for the ::before and ::after pseudo-elements, is twofold:
Having empty inline content at the start and end of every element is rather silly. Remember that the original purpose of the ::before and ::after pseudo-elements is to insert generated content before and after the main content of an originating element. When there's no content to insert, creating an additional box just to insert nothing is pointless. So the none value is there to tell the browser not to bother with creating an additional box.
The practice of using empty ::before and ::after pseudo-elements to create additional boxes for the sole purpose of layout aesthetics is relatively new, and some purists might even go so far as to call it a hack for this reason.
Having empty inline content at the start and end of every element means that every (non-replaced) element — including html and body — would by default generate not one box, but up to three boxes (and more in the case of elements that already generate more than just the principal box, like elements with list styles). How many of the two extra boxes per element will you actually use? That's potentially tripling the cost of layout for very little gain.
Realistically, even in this decade, less than 10% of the elements on a page will ever need ::before and ::after pseudo-elements for layout.
And so these pseudo-elements are made opt-in — because making them opt-out is not only a waste of system resources, but just plain illogical given their original purpose. The performance reason is also why I do not recommend generating pseudo-elements for every element using ::before, ::after.
But then you might ask: why not have the display property default to none on ::before, ::after? Simple: because the initial value of display is not none; it is inline. Having inline compute to none on ::before, ::after is not an option because then you could never display them inline. Having the initial value of display be none on ::before, ::after is not an option because a property can only have one initial value. (This is why the initial value of content is always normal and it is simply defined to compute to none on ::before, ::after.)
Based on your comments on others' answers, I believe your question is actually:
Why must the content property for pseudo-classes be set in the CSS, as
opposed to the content of non-pseudo-classes, which may be set in
either HTML or CSS?
The reason is that:
by definition, pseudo-classes are dynamically created for every single element specified by a page's HTML markup
all page elements, including pseudo-classes, must have a content property to be displayed.
HTML elements like <p> do as well, but you can set their content property quickly using markup (or with CSS declarations).
Howver, unlike non-pseudo-class-elements, pseudo-classes cannot be given values in the markup itself.
∴ Therefore, all pseudo-classes are invisible (their 'content' properties have no value) unless you tell them not to be (by giving them value with CSS declarations).
Take this simple page:
<body>
<p> </p>
</body>
We know this page will display nothing, because the <p> element has no text. A more accurate way to rephrase this, is that the <p> element's content property has no value.
We can easily change this, by setting the content property of the h1 element in the HTML markup:
<body>
<p>This sentence is the content of the p element.</p>
</body>
This will now display when loaded, because the content property of the <p> element has a value; that value is a string:
"This sentence is the content of the p element."
Alternatively, we can cause the <p> element to be displayed by setting the content property of the <p> element in the CSS:
p { content: "This sentence is the content of the p element set in the CSS."; }
These two ways of injecting the string into the <p> element are identical.
Now, consider doing the same thing with pseudo-classes:
HTML:
<body>
<p class="text-placeholder">P</p>
</body>
CSS:
p:before { content: "BEFORE... " ; }
p:after { content: " ...and AFTER"; }
The result:
BEFORE... P ...and AFTER
Finally, imagine how you would accomplish this example without using CSS. It's impossible, because there is no way to set the content of the pseudo-class in the HTML markup.
You might be creative and imagine something like this might work:
<p:before>BEFORE... </p>
<p> P </p>
<p:after> ...and AFTER</p>
But, it doesn't, because <p:before> and <p:after> are not HTML elements.
In conclusion:
Pseudo classes exist for every markup element.
They are invisible by default, because they are initialized with no content property.
You CANNOT set the content property for pseudo classes with HTML markup.
∴ Therefore, pseudo-elements' content property must be declared with CSS declarations, in order to be displayed.
Until you add content: ..., the psuedo-element doesn't actually exist.
Setting other style properties is not enough to force the browser to create the element.
2020 Edit
:before
Is syntax from CSS2 for better practices you should write the newest syntax from CSS3 which is
::before
with double semicolons
Full answer and differences can be found here:
What is the difference between :before and ::before?
I have a site which has editable content via a WYSIWYG inline editor, and users who are very unlikely to understand the need to put containing DIV around similar blocks of code for formatting, resulting in html similar to:
<div class="borderBlock">Content...</div>
<div class="borderBlock">Content...</div>
<div>Other content</div>
<div class="borderBlock">Content...</div>
with current CSS along the lines of:
.borderBlock {
margin: 8px 0;
border: 1px solid;
border-radius: 4px;
}
This gives each div it's own separate border - not quite what is wanted, ideally the first two div's would share a border and background colour!
I know that I can use css such as:
:not(.borderBlock) + .borderBlock { }
to select the first block of class borderBlock - applying formatting for the start of a block, and similarly:
.borderBlock + :not(.borderBlock)
would select the first none borderBlock element... but I can't find a way to select the last borderBlock element in a block that isn't specifically surrounded by another div - in the above html using :last-child or :last-child-of-type would both select only the fourth div, and not style the second div as the end of a borderBlock. Similarly :first-child(-of-kind) would not style the second bordered block.
Is there a CSS solution to this that doesn't use JavaScript, and doesn't involve putting a containing div around each required bordered block? Something equivalent to a CSS look-ahead regular expression rather than the standard CSS look-behind style.
Currently, you cannot do this with CSS selectors, without using JavaScript or modifying your HTML, since there's no preceding sibling selector.
What about something like this?:
http://jsfiddle.net/Hegxc/4/
using :first-of-type and :last-of-type
Is that what you're trying to achieve or have I misunderstood what you're looking for??