CSS Pseudo-elements and CSS Pseudo-classes Demystified

code_rams

Ramya Chinnadurai

Posted on November 8, 2021

CSS Pseudo-elements and CSS Pseudo-classes Demystified

Hey there, today I picked the topic CSS Pseudo-elements and Pseudo-classes, You may ask why? it's because I was little bit confused with the pseudo-elements and pseudo-class. So I just want to make clear about this today and thought to share my learnings here.

Pseudo-elements and Pseudo-classes are some of the cool concepts of CSS. So learning it will surely help you when you want to design with CSS.


So what is Pseudo-element?

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;
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

And what are Pseudo-classes?

A pseudo-class is used to define a special state of an element.

For example, it can be used to:

  • Style an element when a user mouses over it
  • Style visited and unvisited links differently
  • Style an element when it gets focus

Syntax

The syntax of pseudo-classes:

selector:pseudo-class {
  property: value;
}
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

Can you find the difference in syntax?

Notice the double colon notation - ::first-line versus :first-line

The single-colon notation for pseudo-classes and double-colon notation used for pseudo-elements in CSS3.

This was an attempt from W3C to distinguish between pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements.


Examples of CSS Pseudo Elements

Selector Example Description
::after p::after Insert something after the content of each ```

``` element

::before p::before Insert something before the content of each ```

``` element

::first-letter p::first-letter Selects the first letter of each ```

``` element

::first-line p::first-line Selects the first line of each ```

``` element

::marker ::marker Selects the markers of list items
::selection p::selection Selects the portion of an element that is selected by a user

Examples of CSS Pseudo Classes

Selector Example Example description
:active a:active Selects the active link
:checked input:checked Selects every checked `````` element
:disabled input:disabled Selects every disabled `````` element
:empty p:empty Selects every ```

``` element that has no children

:enabled input:enabled Selects every enabled `````` element
:first-child p:first-child Selects every ```

``` elements that is the first child of its parent

:first-of-type p:first-of-type Selects every ```

``` element that is the first ```

``` element of its parent

:focus input:focus Selects the `````` element that has focus
:hover a:hover Selects links on mouse over
:in-range input:in-range Selects `````` elements with a value within a specified range
:invalid input:invalid Selects all `````` elements with an invalid value
:lang(language) p:lang(it) Selects every ```

``` element with a lang attribute value starting with "it"

:last-child p:last-child Selects every ```

``` elements that is the last child of its parent

:last-of-type p:last-of-type Selects every ```

``` element that is the last ```

``` element of its parent

:link a:link Selects all unvisited links
:not(selector) :not(p) Selects every element that is not a ```

``` element

:nth-child(n) p:nth-child(2) Selects every ```

``` element that is the second child of its parent

:nth-last-child(n) p:nth-last-child(2) Selects every ```

``` 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 ```

``` element that is the second ```

``` element of its parent, counting from the last child

:nth-of-type(n) p:nth-of-type(2) Selects every ```

``` element that is the second ```

``` element of its parent

:only-of-type p:only-of-type Selects every ```

``` element that is the only ```

``` element of its parent

:only-child p:only-child Selects every ```

``` element that is the only child of its parent

:optional input:optional Selects `````` elements with no "required" attribute
:out-of-range input:out-of-range Selects `````` elements with a value outside a specified range
:read-only input:read-only Selects `````` elements with a "readonly" attribute specified
:read-write input:read-write Selects `````` elements with no "readonly" attribute
:required input:required Selects `````` 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 `````` elements with a valid value
:visited a:visited Selects all visited links

References

  1. https://www.w3schools.com/css/css_pseudo_elements.asp
  2. https://www.w3schools.com/css/css_pseudo_classes.asp
  3. https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Learn/CSS/Building_blocks/Selectors/Pseudo-classes_and_pseudo-elements

Hope you get an idea about pseudo-elements and pseudo-classes. Thanks for taking your time and reading this article. This article was originally published in my blog.

If you found this article useful do follow me on Twitter. Feel free to contact me anytime to discuss or share your ideas.

💖 💪 🙅 🚩
code_rams
Ramya Chinnadurai

Posted on November 8, 2021

Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.

Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.

Related