CSS3 selectors Cheat Sheet

CSS Selectors

CSS selectors are utilized to select the content you need to style. In CSS Rule Set, Selectors are the part. CSS selectors select HTML elements as per their id, class, type, attribute, etc.

CSS selectors are divided into five categories:

  1. Simple/Basic selectors (select elements based on name, id, class)
  2. Combinator selectors (select elements based on a specific relationship between them)
  3. Pseudo-classes selectors (select elements based on a certain state)
  4. Pseudo-elements selectors (select and style a part of an element)
  5. Attribute selectors (select elements based on an attribute or attribute value)

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

Basic Selectors

Selector Description Example
element Type selector. Matches an element. p { color: red }
matches paragraphs
.class Class selector. Matches the value of anclassattribute. .warning { color: red }
matches elements containing class="warning"
#id ID selector. Matches the value of an id attribute. #warning { color: red }
matches elements containing id="warning"
* Universal selector. Matches everything. * { color: red }
matches everything

Attribute selectors

Selector Description Example
[attribute] Matches elements containing a given attribute. a[href] {
color: red;
}
matches a elements with an href attribute
[attribute="x"] Matches elements containing a given attribute with a given value. a[href="/x/"]
{color: red;}
matches a elements with the attribute and value href="/x/"
[attribute~="x"] Matches elements containing a given attribute with a value that contains a sub-value within a space-separated list. abbr[title~="x"]
{ color: red;}
matches abbr elements with a title that contains 'x' (such as in title="Cascading Style Sheets")
[attribute|="x"] Matches elements containing a given attribute with a value that contains a sub-value within a hyphen-separated list.
Matches html elements with a lang attribute that contains 'en' (such as in lang="en-gb")
[attribute^="x"] Matches elements containing a given attribute with a value that starts with something. a[href^="http://"]
{color: red;} matches a elements with an href attribute, the value of which begins with 'http://'
[attribute$="x"] Matches elements containing a given attribute with a value that ends with something. a[href$=".com"]
{color: red; }
matches a elements with an href attribute, the value of which ends with '.com'
[attribute*="x"] Matches elements containing a given attribute with a value that contains something. a[href*="hdog"]
{color: red;}
matches a elements with an href attribute, the value of which contains 'hdog'

Pseudo-classes Selectors

Selector Description Example
:link Matches a link that has not been visited. a:link { color: blue }
:visited Matches a link that has been visited. a:visited { color: purple }
:active Matches an element that is being activated, such as a link being clicked on. a:active { color: red }
:hover Matches an element whose box is being hovered over by a cursor. a:hover { text-decoration: none }
:focus Matches an element that has focus, such as one that has been tabbed to. a:focus { border: 1px solid yellow }
:target Matches an element that has been linked to (via<a href="#x"…,for example). h2:target { color: red }
matches a second-level heading that has been linked to
:lang() Matches an element of a given language. p:lang(fr) { color: red }
matches paragraphs that are declared, or otherwise considered, as French
:first-child Matches the first child of an element. p:first-child { color: red }
matches the first child, if it is a paragraph, of an element
:last-child Matches the last child of an element. div p:last-child { color: blue }
matches the last child, if it is a paragraph, of an element
:first-of-type Matches the first sibling of its type in an element. li:first-of-type { color: red }
matches the first instance of a list item inside an element
:last-of-type Matches the last sibling of its type in an element. li:last-of-type { color: blue }
matches the last instance of a list item inside an element
:nth-child() Matches an element that is the ordinal number child of its parent. p:nth-child(3) { color: red }
matches the third child, if it is a paragrpah, of an element
:nth-last-child() Matches an element that is the ordinal number child, in reverse order, of its parent. p:nth-last-child(2) { color: blue }
matches the next-to-last child, if it is a paragraph, of an element
:nth-of-type() Matches an element that is the ordinal number sibling of its type. li:nth-of-type(5) { color: red }
matches the fifth instance of a list item inside an element
:nth-last-of-type() Matches an element that is the ordinal number sibling, in reverse order, of its type. li:nth-of-type(5) { color: red }
matches the next-to-last instance of a list item inside an element
:only-child Matches an element if it is the only child of its parent. article p:only-child { color: red }
matches a paragraph if it is the only child of an article element
:only-of-type Matches an element if it is the only sibling of its type. article aside:only-of-type { color: blue }
matches an aside element if it is the only aside element in an article element
:empty Matches an element with no children, or content. td:empty { border-color: red }
matches table data cells with nothing in 'em
:root Matches the root element of a document. This will be the html element in HTML. :root { background: yellow }
:enabled Matches form control elements that are not disabled. input:enabled { border-color: lime }
matches input elements that are not disabled
:disabled Matches form control elements that are disabled. input:enabled { border-color: red }
matches input elements that are disabled
:checked Matches a radio or checkbox type input element that is checked. input:checked { outline: 3px solid yellow }
matches checked input elements
:not() Negotiation pseudo-class. Matches an element that does not match a selector. p:not(:first-child) { color: orange }
matches paragraphs that are not first children

Pseudo-elements Selectors

Selector Description Example
::first-line Matches the first textual line in an element. p::first-line { font-weight: bold }
matches the first line in a paragraph
::first-letter Matches the first letter in an element. p::first-letter { font-size: 2em }
matches the first letter in a paragraph
::before Used with the content property to generate content before the initial content of an element. h1::before { content: "*" }
places an asterisk at the start of a top-level heading
::after Used with the content property to generate content after the initial content of an element. h1::after { content: "+" }
places a plus-sign at the end of a top-level heading

Combinator Selectors

Selector Description Example
selector selector Descendant combinator. Matches elements that are descendants of another element. aside p { color: red }
matches paragraphs inside elements containing class="warning"
selector > selector Child combinator. Matches elements that are children of another element. .warning > p { color: red }
matches paragraphs that are children of elements containing class="warning"
selector + selector Adjacent sibling combinator. Matches elements that immediately follow another element. h1 + * { color: red }
matches the first element to follow a top-level heading
selector ~ selector General sibling combinator. Matches elements that follow another element. h2 ~ p { color: red }
matches every paragraph that follows a second-level heading

CSS Group Selector

The grouping selector in CSS picks all the HTML elements with the same style definitions.

h1 { 
  text-align: center; 
  color: red; 
} 
h2 { 
  text-align: center; 
  color: red; 
} 
p { 
  text-align: center; 
  color: red; 
}

To minimize the code, just apply the CSS grouping selectors. Simply group the selectors by separating each selector with a comma. Let's see the following code after CSS Grouping Selectors:

h1, h2, p { 
  text-align: center; 
  color: red; 
}

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