Besides all the correct answers about different implementation versions of both selectors, I would assume this is some kind of convention following the principle of least surprise:
There is a :last-child
selector which is some kind of special thing (that can't be replaced with any :nth-child
selector call (okay, besides some dirty hacks)), so one would always expect there is also a :first-child
.
I personally would be very confused if I see any last
function/selector without an equivalent first
.
The other way round this might be different (as first
is more useful in most cases, e.g. for text highlighting the first character of a chapter in a book etc.). So there is the ::first-letter
selector, but there is no ::last-letter
(yet?). But I wouldn't expect there is one, because no one really highlights the last letter of a text in practical. That's what happened with the :first-child
selector too: It got introduced with CSS2, but that time there was no :last-child
yet and got introducted with CSS3 together with the :nth-child
selector.
nth-child
.:first-child
in CSS 2,:nth-child
in CSS 3.