133

If they exist in programming),

If I have an HTML form with the following inputs:

<input type="text" />
<input type="password" />
<input type="checkbox" />

I want to apply a style to all inputs that are either type="text" or type="password".

Alternatively, I would settle for all input's where type != "checkbox".

It seems like I to have to do this:

input[type='text'], input[type='password']
{
   // my css
}

Isn't there a way to do:

input[type='text',type='password']
{
   // my css
}

or

input[type!='checkbox']
{
   // my css
}

I had a look around, and it doesn't seem like there is a way to do this with a single CSS selector.

Not a big deal of course, but I'm just a curious cat.

Any ideas?

2 Answers 2

247

CSS3 has a pseudo-class called :not()

input:not([type='checkbox']) {    
    visibility: hidden;
}
<p>If <code>:not()</code> is supported, you'll only see the checkbox.</p>
                                      
<ul>
  <li>text: (<input type="text">)</li>  
  <li>password (<input type="password">)</li>       
  <li>checkbox (<input type="checkbox">)</li> 
 </ul>


Multiple selectors

As Vincent mentioned, it's possible to string multiple :not()s together:

input:not([type='checkbox']):not([type='submit'])

CSS4, which is supported in many of the latest browser releases, allows multiple selectors in a :not()

input:not([type='checkbox'],[type='submit'])

Legacy support

All modern browsers support the CSS3 syntax. At the time this question was asked, we needed a fall-back for IE7 and IE8. One option was to use a polyfill like IE9.js. Another was to exploit the cascade in CSS:

input {
   // styles for most inputs
}   

input[type=checkbox] {
  // revert back to the original style
} 

input.checkbox {
  // for completeness, this would have worked even in IE3!
} 
3
  • 1
    nice one! thanks. is that CSS3 selector fully supported? (i only really care about IE7+, FF3+, Safari recent, Chrome recent)
    – RPM1984
    Aug 10, 2010 at 2:41
  • 1
    It's supported in IE9+ and all other modern browsers. quirksmode.org/css/contents.html#t37 Mar 17, 2012 at 2:16
  • 13
    For the sake of completeness if you want to do multiple "not"s then this is the syntax to use: input:not([type='checkbox']):not([type='submit'])
    – Vincent
    Dec 27, 2013 at 21:55
31
input[type='text'], input[type='password']
{
   // my css
}

That is the correct way to do it. Sadly CSS is not a programming language.

2
  • 4
    You could use Less CSS or Sass, though.
    – vbullinger
    Oct 3, 2012 at 20:06
  • Less, yes! I love it.
    – Liglo App
    Sep 12, 2014 at 10:50

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