A pseudo-class is used to define a special state of an element.
Syntax
The syntax of pseudo-classes:
Links can be displayed in different ways:
Example
Note: a:hover MUST come after a:link and a:visited in the CSS definition in order to be effective! a:active MUST come after a:hover in the CSS definition in order to be effective! Pseudo-class names are not case-sensitive.
Pseudo-classes and CSS Classes
Pseudo-classes can be combined with CSS classes:
When you hover over the link in the example, it will change color:
Example
Hover on <div>
An example of using the :hover pseudo-class on a <div> element:
Example
Simple Tooltip Hover
Hover over a <div> element to show a <p> element (like a tooltip):
Example
CSS - The :first-child Pseudo-class
The :first-child pseudo-class matches a specified element that is the first child of another element.
Match the first <p> element
In the following example, the selector matches any <p> element that is the first child of any element:
Example
Match the first <i> element in all <p> elements
In the following example, the selector matches the first <i> element in all <p> elements:
Example
Match all <i> elements in all first child <p> elements
In the following example, the selector matches all <i> elements in <p> elements that are the first child of another element:
Example
CSS - The :lang Pseudo-class
The :lang pseudo-class allows you to define special rules for different languages.
In the example below, :lang defines the quotation marks for <q> elements with lang="no":
Example
All CSS Pseudo Classes
Syntax
The syntax of pseudo-classes:
selector:pseudo-class {Anchor Pseudo-classes
property:value;
}
Links can be displayed in different ways:
Example
/* unvisited link */
a:link {
color: #FF0000;
}
/* visited link */
a:visited {
color: #00FF00;
}
/* mouse over link */
a:hover {
color: #FF00FF;
}
/* selected link */
a:active {
color: #0000FF;
}
Try it »
Note: a:hover MUST come after a:link and a:visited in the CSS definition in order to be effective! a:active MUST come after a:hover in the CSS definition in order to be effective! Pseudo-class names are not case-sensitive.
Pseudo-classes and CSS Classes
Pseudo-classes can be combined with CSS classes:
When you hover over the link in the example, it will change color:
Example
a.highlight:hover {
color: #ff0000;
}
Try it »
Hover on <div>
An example of using the :hover pseudo-class on a <div> element:
Example
div:hover {
background-color: blue;
}
Try it »
Simple Tooltip Hover
Hover over a <div> element to show a <p> element (like a tooltip):
Example
p {
display: none;
background-color: yellow;
padding: 20px;
}
div:hover p {
display: block;
}
Try it »
CSS - The :first-child Pseudo-class
The :first-child pseudo-class matches a specified element that is the first child of another element.
Match the first <p> element
In the following example, the selector matches any <p> element that is the first child of any element:
Example
p:first-child {
color: blue;
}
Try it Yourself »
Match the first <i> element in all <p> elements
In the following example, the selector matches the first <i> element in all <p> elements:
Example
p i:first-child {
color: blue;
}
Try it »
Match all <i> elements in all first child <p> elements
In the following example, the selector matches all <i> elements in <p> elements that are the first child of another element:
Example
p:first-child i {
color: blue;
}
Try it »
CSS - The :lang Pseudo-class
The :lang pseudo-class allows you to define special rules for different languages.
In the example below, :lang defines the quotation marks for <q> elements with lang="no":
Example
<html>
<head>
<style>
q:lang(no) {
quotes: "~" "~";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p>Some text <q lang="no">A quote in a paragraph</q> Some text.</p>
</body>
</html>
Try it »
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 |