CSS Selectors
A CSS selector selects the
HTML element(s) you want to style.
CSS Selectors
CSS selectors are used to
"find" (or select) the HTML elements you want to style.
We can divide CSS selectors
into five categories:
- Simple
selectors (select elements based on name, id, class)
- Combinator
selectors (select
elements based on a specific relationship between them)
- Pseudo-class selectors (select
elements based on a certain state)
- Pseudo-elements selectors (select
and style a part of an element)
- Attribute
selectors (select
elements based on an attribute or attribute value)
This page will explain the
most basic CSS selectors.
The CSS element Selector
The element selector
selects HTML elements based on the element name.
Example
Here, all
<p> elements on the page will be center-aligned, with a red text
color:
p {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
The CSS id Selector
The id selector uses the id
attribute of an HTML element to select a specific element.
The id of an element is
unique within a page, so the id selector is used to select one unique element!
To select an element with a
specific id, write a hash (#) character, followed by the id of the element.
Example
The CSS
rule below will be applied to the HTML element with id="para1":
#para1 {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
Note: An id name cannot start with a number!
The CSS class Selector
The class selector selects
HTML elements with a specific class attribute.
To select elements with a
specific class, write a period (.) character, followed by the class name.
Example
In this example
all HTML elements with class="center" will be red and
center-aligned:
.center {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
You can also specify that
only specific HTML elements should be affected by a class.
Example
In this
example only <p> elements with class="center" will be red and
center-aligned:
p.center {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
HTML elements can also
refer to more than one class.
Example
In this
example the <p> element will be styled according to
class="center" and to class="large":
<p class="center
large">This paragraph refers to two classes.</p>
Note: A class name cannot start with a number!
The CSS Universal Selector
The universal selector (*)
selects all HTML elements on the page.
Example
The CSS
rule below will affect every HTML element on the page:
* {
text-align: center;
color: blue;
}
The CSS Grouping Selector
The grouping selector
selects all the HTML elements with the same style definitions.
Look at the following CSS
code (the h1, h2, and p elements have the same style definitions):
h1 {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
h2 {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
p {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
It will be better to group
the selectors, to minimize the code.
To group selectors,
separate each selector with a comma.
Example
In this
example we have grouped the selectors from the code above:
h1, h2, p {
text-align: center;
color: red;
}
All CSS Simple Selectors
Selector |
Example |
Example
description |
#id |
#firstname |
Selects
the element with id="firstname" |
.class |
.intro |
Selects
all elements with class="intro" |
element.class |
p.intro |
Selects
only <p> elements with class="intro" |
* |
* |
Selects
all elements |
element |
p |
Selects
all <p> elements |
element,element,.. |
div,
p |
Selects
all <div> elements and all <p> elements |