1

For the longest time I was styling my elements in this way.

table .class tr, th{

} 

Today I had some insane css related bugs and it occurred to me that it may have worked in the past by accident and in fact what it is doing is not selecting tables of a certain class but selecting tables followed by elements of a certain class.

I kind of assumed that css would just ignore the space between table and .class. But does it?

table.class tr, th{

} 

Would this work differently? I can't believe I didn't think about this before! (embarrassed)

Thanks!

4 Answers 4

4

table .class tr selects this:

<table>
    <tbody class="class">
        <tr></tr>
    </tbody>
</table>

While table.class tr selects this:

<table class="class">
    <tr></tr>
</table>
2

You answered it in your question:

table .class tr, th... selects a tr inside a .class element inside a table and a th.

table.class tr, th... selects a tr inside a table with the class "class" and a th.

The space makes a difference.

With the space, you are selecting another element in between the table and the tr (perhaps a thead or tbody?)

Without the space, you are selecting a table with the class class.

BTW, I am not sure you want this, but the , th means "also give these same styles to all ths".

1

table.foo selects tables with the class foo.

table .foo selects all elements that have the class foo, and are inside a table.

So your selector before:

table .class tr, th selects all trs that are inside an element which has class class and is inside a table, as well as all ths on the page.

1

table .class tr would select a tr:

<table>
  <tbody class="class">
    <tr></tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

but nothing:

<table class="class">
  <tr></tr>
</table>

While table.class tr would select a tr:

<table class="class">
  <tr></tr>
</table>

AND a tr:

<table class="class">
  <tbody>
    <tr></tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

But nothing:

<table>
  <tbody class="class">
    <tr></tr>
  </tbody>
</table>

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