CSS Pseudo-elements- class
What are Pseudo-Elements?
A CSS pseudo-element is
used to style specified parts of an element.
For example, it can be used
to:
- Style
the first letter, or line, of an element
- Insert
content before, or after, the content of an element
Syntax
The syntax of
pseudo-elements:
selector::pseudo-element {
property: value;
}
The ::first-line Pseudo-element
The ::first-line pseudo-element is used to add a special
style to the first line of a text.
The following example
formats the first line of the text in all <p> elements:
Example
p::first-line {
color: #ff0000;
font-variant: small-caps;
}
Note: The ::first-line pseudo-element can only be applied to
block-level elements.
The following properties
apply to the ::first-line pseudo-element:
- font
properties
- color
properties
- background
properties
- word-spacing
- letter-spacing
- text-decoration
- vertical-align
- text-transform
- line-height
- clear
Notice the double colon notation - ::first-line versus :first-line
The double colon replaced the single-colon notation for pseudo-elements in
CSS3. This was an attempt from W3C to distinguish between pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements.
The single-colon syntax was used for both pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements in
CSS2 and CSS1.
For backward compatibility, the single-colon syntax is acceptable for CSS2 and
CSS1 pseudo-elements.
The ::first-letter Pseudo-element
The ::first-letter pseudo-element is used to add a special
style to the first letter of a text.
The following example
formats the first letter of the text in all <p> elements:
Example
p::first-letter {
color: #ff0000;
font-size: xx-large;
}
Note: The ::first-letter pseudo-element can only be applied to
block-level elements.
The following properties
apply to the ::first-letter pseudo- element:
- font
properties
- color
properties
- background
properties
- margin
properties
- padding
properties
- border
properties
- text-decoration
- vertical-align
(only if "float" is "none")
- text-transform
- line-height
- float
- clear
Pseudo-elements and HTML Classes
Pseudo-elements can be
combined with HTML classes:
Example
p.intro::first-letter {
color: #ff0000;
font-size: 200%;
}
The example above will
display the first letter of paragraphs with class="intro", in red and
in a larger size.
Multiple Pseudo-elements
Several pseudo-elements can
also be combined.
In the following example,
the first letter of a paragraph will be red, in an xx-large font size. The rest
of the first line will be blue, and in small-caps. The rest of the paragraph
will be the default font size and color:
Example
p::first-letter {
color: #ff0000;
font-size: xx-large;
}
p::first-line {
color: #0000ff;
font-variant: small-caps;
}
CSS - The ::before Pseudo-element
The ::before pseudo-element can be used to insert some content before the
content of an element.
The following example
inserts an image before the content of each <h1> element:
Example
h1::before {
content: url(smiley.gif);
}
CSS - The ::after Pseudo-element
The ::after pseudo-element can be used to insert some content after the
content of an element.
The following example
inserts an image after the content of each <h1> element:
Example
h1::after {
content: url(smiley.gif);
}
CSS - The ::marker Pseudo-element
The ::marker pseudo-element selects the markers of list items.
The following example
styles the markers of list items:
Example
::marker {
color: red;
font-size: 23px;
}
CSS - The ::selection Pseudo-element
The ::selection pseudo-element matches the portion of an
element that is selected by a user.
The following CSS
properties can be applied to ::selection: color, background, cursor, and outline.
The following example makes
the selected text red on a yellow background:
Example
::selection {
color: red;
background: yellow;
}
All
CSS Pseudo Elements
Selector |
Example |
Example description |
::after |
p::after |
Insert something after
the content of each <p> element |
::before |
p::before |
Insert something before
the content of each <p> element |
::first-letter |
p::first-letter |
Selects the first letter
of each <p> element |
::first-line |
p::first-line |
Selects the first line of
each <p> element |
::marker |
::marker |
Selects the markers of
list items |
::selection |
p::selection |
Selects the portion of an
element that is selected by a user |
All CSS Pseudo Classes
Selector |
Example |
Example description |
:active |
a:active |
Selects the active link |
:checked |
input:checked |
Selects every checked
<input> element |
:disabled |
input:disabled |
Selects every disabled
<input> element |
:empty |
p:empty |
Selects every <p>
element that has no children |
:enabled |
input:enabled |
Selects every enabled
<input> element |
:first-child |
p:first-child |
Selects every <p>
elements that is the first child of its parent |
:first-of-type |
p:first-of-type |
Selects every <p>
element that is the first <p> element of its parent |
:focus |
input:focus |
Selects the <input>
element that has focus |
:hover |
a:hover |
Selects links on mouse
over |
:in-range |
input:in-range |
Selects <input>
elements with a value within a specified range |
:invalid |
input:invalid |
Selects all <input>
elements with an invalid value |
:lang(language) |
p:lang(it) |
Selects every <p>
element with a lang attribute value starting with "it" |
:last-child |
p:last-child |
Selects every <p>
elements that is the last child of its parent |
:last-of-type |
p:last-of-type |
Selects every <p>
element that is the last <p> element of its parent |
:link |
a:link |
Selects all unvisited
links |
:not(selector) |
:not(p) |
Selects every element
that is not a <p> element |
:nth-child(n) |
p:nth-child(2) |
Selects every <p>
element that is the second child of its parent |
:nth-last-child(n) |
p:nth-last-child(2) |
Selects every <p>
element that is the second child of its parent, counting from the last child |
:nth-last-of-type(n) |
p:nth-last-of-type(2) |
Selects every <p>
element that is the second <p> element of its parent, counting from the
last child |
:nth-of-type(n) |
p:nth-of-type(2) |
Selects every <p>
element that is the second <p> element of its parent |
:only-of-type |
p:only-of-type |
Selects every <p>
element that is the only <p> element of its parent |
:only-child |
p:only-child |
Selects every <p>
element that is the only child of its parent |
:optional |
input:optional |
Selects <input>
elements with no "required" attribute |
:out-of-range |
input:out-of-range |
Selects <input>
elements with a value outside a specified range |
:read-only |
input:read-only |
Selects <input>
elements with a "readonly" attribute specified |
:read-write |
input:read-write |
Selects <input>
elements with no "readonly" attribute |
:required |
input:required |
Selects <input>
elements with a "required" attribute specified |
:root |
root |
Selects the document's
root element |
:target |
#news:target |
Selects the current
active #news element (clicked on a URL containing that anchor name) |
:valid |
input:valid |
Selects all <input>
elements with a valid value |
:visited |
a:visited |
Selects all visited links |