12

Here's my problem.

HTML

<div id="content">
    <h1>Headline</h1>
    <p>First paragraph that needs to be yellow.</p>
    <p>Second paragraph that need not change. :) </p>
    <p>Third paragraph that need not change. :) </p>
</div>

If I use #content p:first-child {color:yellow; } it doesn't work because p isn't the first-child of content... h1 is the first born.

How can I do this without touching the HTML code?

Thank you!

All the best, Cris

2
  • Do you want jQuery (Javascript) or CSS? Apr 19, 2011 at 20:22
  • any would do. I got the answer with jQuery and works great.
    – Cris
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:30

9 Answers 9

20

a css3 solution

#content > p:first-of-type { color: yellow; }
0
14

This is the best way:

$('#content p:first').css('color', 'yellow');
1
  • Works beautifully. Thank you all.
    – Cris
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:28
4

you can use also (CSS, jQuery) nth-of-type:

#content p:nth-of-type(1) {color:yellow; }

$('#content p:nth-of-type(1)').css('color', 'yellow');
3

Use the .first() function (or :first selector) instead:

$('#content > p').first().css('color', 'yellow');
3
  • see @Naveed's more succinct answer - that one's faster though they both work.
    – Milimetric
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:27
  • 1
    really? ISTR reading that the function based filters are faster than using sizzle-based selectors because they require less parsing.
    – Alnitak
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:29
  • I think that is the official advice from jQuery, because Sizzle parses right-to-left, whereas jQuery parses left-to-right. Hence Sizzle will select every p:first and then narrow it to the p:first with a parent of #content, whereas jQuery will first select #content and then select the ps, and then select the first one. However, the performance is negligible in normal HTML pages.
    – Dan Blows
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:48
2
<script>
$(function(){
    $('#content p:first').css('color','yellow');
});
</script>
2

Since you have tagged it using jQuery, jQuery based solution:

$("#content p:first-child").css({color:"yellow;" });

EDIT:

$("#content p:nth-child(2)").css({color:"yellow" });
0
1

With just CSS, you could use the sibling selector + like so:

#content h1 + p { color: yellow; }

This would only change paragraphs immediately following H1s.

7
  • 2
    Note that this wouldn't work in some browsers. Specifically those that begin with I and end with E
    – Milimetric
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:25
  • @Milimetric Ha, quite right. Though it has apparently worked non-dynamically since IE 7 (quirksmode.org/css/contents.html).
    – DaveGauer
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:26
  • In this jsFiddle its making all of the p tags yellow not just the first one
    – ExtraGravy
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:27
  • @ExtraGravy Your example works correctly for me in Firefox 4.0. What browser are you using?
    – DaveGauer
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:29
  • @D Gauer I'm using Chrome. I would have expected these two to work alike, is weird
    – ExtraGravy
    Apr 19, 2011 at 20:41
1
$('#content p').first().css({ color: 'yellow' });
1

Try this:

$("div p:first")
        .css("text-decoration", "underline")
        .hover(function () {
              $(this).addClass("sogreen");
            }, function () {
              $(this).removeClass("sogreen");
            });

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