80

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.

2
  • I'm curious: why do you need this?
    – strager
    Aug 25, 2009 at 21:40
  • 4
    Hi strager: I am making a navigation bar and want the properties of the last element to be different then the rest of them. Aug 26, 2009 at 15:15

10 Answers 10

107

: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.

5
  • Nice that you incorporated my answer into yours after I posted it. Aug 25, 2009 at 17:59
  • 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
  • No problem. I was actually saying that it validates at least part of how I've done this. Aug 25, 2009 at 19:45
  • 1
    Sorry 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
  • 1
    jQuery does let the browser handle the selection if it understands :last-child though.
    – BoltClock
    Jul 7, 2011 at 21:35
65

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;
}
4
  • By far the cleanest solution (if supported obviously). Mar 8, 2013 at 12:37
  • 3
    The 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
  • +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
  • 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 :)
    – zak
    Aug 30, 2019 at 2:46
12

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{ /* ... */ }
1
  • 1
    Just a minor correction, :last-child doesn't work on IE7 as well.
    – vise
    Aug 26, 2009 at 0:11
10

You could use jQuery and do it as such way

$("li:last-child").addClass("someClass");
7

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.

5

2015 Answer: CSS last-of-type allows you to style the last item.

ul li:last-of-type { color: red; }
3

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.

0
2

: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');
2

$('li').last().addClass('someClass');

if you have multiple

  • group it will only select the last li.

    0

    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.

    Your Answer

    By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

    Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.