I am wondering if there is some way to change a CSS attribute for the last li
in a list using CSS. I have looked into using :last-child
, but this seems really buggy and I can't get it to work for me. I will use JavaScript to do this if necessary, but I want to know if anyone can think up a solution in CSS.
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I'm curious: why do you need this?– stragerAug 25, 2009 at 21:40
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4Hi strager: I am making a navigation bar and want the properties of the last element to be different then the rest of them.– individualtermiteAug 26, 2009 at 15:15
10 Answers
:last-child
is really the only way to do it without modifying the HTML - but assuming you can do that, the main option is just to give it a class="last-item"
, then do:
li.last-item { /* ... */ }
Obviously, you can automate this in the dynamic page generation language of your choice. Also, there is a lastChild
JavaScript property in the W3C DOM.
Here's an example of doing what you want in Prototype:
$$("ul").each(function(x) { $(x.lastChild).addClassName("last-item"); });
Or even more simply:
$$("ul li:last-child").each(function(x) { x.addClassName("last-item"); });
In jQuery, you can write it even more compactly:
$("ul li:last-child").addClass("last-item");
Also note that this should work without using the actual last-child
CSS selector - rather, a JavaScript implementation of it is used - so it should be less buggy and more reliable across browsers.
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Nice that you incorporated my answer into yours after I posted it. Aug 25, 2009 at 17:59
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Sorry - I was in the middle of posting the JQuery equivalent of the Prototype code I had already posted. If you would like, I can edit the JQuery part out. Aug 25, 2009 at 18:07
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No problem. I was actually saying that it validates at least part of how I've done this. Aug 25, 2009 at 19:45
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1Sorry again for misunderstanding :). Technically, your code is 10x better - it actually works! (Typo will be fixed in 10..9..) Aug 25, 2009 at 21:36
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1jQuery does let the browser handle the selection if it understands
:last-child
though. Jul 7, 2011 at 21:35
I've done this with pure CSS (probably because I come from the future - 3 years later than everyone else :P )
Supposing we have a list:
<ul id="nav">
<li><span>Category 1</span></li>
<li><span>Category 2</span></li>
<li><span>Category 3</span></li>
</ul>
Then we can easily make the text of the last item red with:
ul#nav li:last-child span {
color: Red;
}
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3The selector does the trick "ul#nav li:last-child span" works and "#nav li:last-child span" does not. While technically both points to the same element , the first one is more specific. Salutes to the "man from future" Feb 24, 2014 at 12:44
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+1 for the "man from the future" ;) - although strictly speaking, two years down you're a man from the past :P Oct 2, 2014 at 9:10
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but because he wrote it 2 years ago doesn't mean he's not from the future, rather a man from the future with a past :)– zakAug 30, 2019 at 2:46
I usually combine CSS and JavaScript approaches, so that it works without JavaScript in all browsers but IE6/7, and in IE6/7 with JavaScript on (but not off), since they does not support the :last-child
pseudo-class.
$("li:last-child").addClass("last-child");
li:last-child,li.last-child{ /* ... */ }
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1
You could use jQuery and do it as such way
$("li:last-child").addClass("someClass");
One alternative for IE7+ and other browsers may be to use :first-child
instead, and invert your styles.
For example, if you're setting the margin on each li
:
ul li {
margin-bottom: 1em;
}
ul li:last-child {
margin-bottom: 0;
}
You could replace it with this:
ul li {
margin-top: 1em;
}
ul li:first-child {
margin-top: 0;
}
This will work well for some other cases like borders.
According to sitepoint, :first-child
buggy, but only to the extent that it will select some root elements (the doctype or html), and may not change styles if other elements are inserted.
2015 Answer: CSS last-of-type allows you to style the last item.
ul li:last-of-type { color: red; }
I usually do this by creating a htc file (ex. last-child.htc):
<attach event="ondocumentready" handler="initializeBehaviours" />
<script type="text/javascript">
function initializeBehaviours() {
this.lastChild.className += ' last-child';
}
</script>
And call it from my IE conditional css file with:
ul { behavior: url("/javascripts/htc/last-child.htc"); }
Whereas in my main css file I got:
ul li:last-child,
ul li.last-child {
/* some code */
}
Another solution (albeit slower) that uses your existent css markup without defining any .last-child class would be Dean Edwards ie7.js library.
:last-child is CSS3 and has no IE support while :first-child is CSS2, I believe the following is the safe way to implement it using jquery
$('li').last().addClass('someClass');
$('li').last().addClass('someClass');
if you have multiple
If you know there are three li's in the list you're looking at, for example, you could do this:
li + li + li { /* Selects third to last li */
}
In IE6 you can use expressions:
li {
color: expression(this.previousSibling ? 'red' : 'green'); /* 'green' if last child */
}
I would recommend using a specialized class or Javascript (not IE6 expressions), though, until the :last-child
selector gets better support.