35

I need to style an element that has both class .a and class .b. How do I do it?

The order the classes appear in the HTML might vary.

<style>
    div.a ? div.b {
        color:#f00;
    }
</style>
<div class="a">text not red</div>
<div class="b">text not red</div>
<div class="a b">red text</div>
<div class="b a">red text</div>

5 Answers 5

71

That's entirely possible. If you specify two classes on an element (without any spaces), that means that it must have both for the rule to apply.

div.a {
  color: blue;
}
div.b {
  color: green;
}
div.a.b {
  color: red;
}
<div class="a">
  A
</div>
<div class="b">
  B
</div>
<div class="a b">
  AB
</div>

2
  • Is this supported in IE9? I am having issues where elements with just one of the classes are picking up the style. This is the doc-type I am using.. <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
    – Dib
    Feb 7, 2017 at 12:19
  • 1
    @Dib, I created an example using that doctype on JS Bin (jsbin.com/xepemipuqo/1/edit) which works just fine in IE 9. Hope it helps!
    – bdukes
    Feb 7, 2017 at 16:24
14

Class selectors can be combined:

div.a.b {
  color: red;
}

Quoting from the spec:

To match a subset of "class" values, each value must be preceded by a ".".

For example, the following rule matches any P element whose "class" attribute has been assigned a list of space-separated values that includes "pastoral" and "marine":

p.marine.pastoral { color: green }

This rule matches when class="pastoral blue aqua marine" but does not match for class="pastoral blue".

6
div[class~="a"][class~="b"] {
    color: #f00;
}
1
  • 1
    I love this but worth mentioning that legacy browser support is fairly low.
    – Adam Waite
    Feb 6, 2013 at 22:05
-2
/* select div tag having class a and b together */
<style>
div.a.b
{ 
    color:#f00;
}
</style>
<div class="a">text not red</div>
<div class="b">text not red</div>
<div class="a b">red text</div>
<div class="b a">red text</div>
-5

Yeah, use a common class, or why not, JavaScript if the content changes dynamically

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