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I've been dipping into SitePoint book concerning CSS.

The thing that struck me about the examples was the use of ID as a CSS selector.

Some bits of CSS design I've done, I've always found it easier and more versatile to use Class as the selector.

Maybe its a .Net thing as we don't always have control of the ID of an element...

Is the best practice here to use CLASS or ID as the selector?

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11 Answers 11

51

I guess they always use the id in examples because it's less ambiguous. You know that they're talking specifically about that one element and its styles.

In general, the rule of thumb is that you should ask yourself: "is there more than one element which requires the same style, now or at any time in the future?", and the answer is even "maybe", then make it a class.

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    That sums my opinion up quite well! Use Class, and only use ID as a selector when needed. I'll rummage through the book to see if there was any further elaboration on this....if not I may even email the authors
    – Mesh
    Nov 18, 2008 at 14:00
  • 2
    Agreed. It may help to choose ID names that imply uniqueness, like "mainsection" or "navbar." Nov 18, 2008 at 16:03
  • I think this answer has it about right. I would express this as "use an ID if and only if it would be nonsensical to select more than one element for whatever you're doing with the selected element". For styling, that is very rare in my experience; you'll almost always be better off with a class. Following this rule, IDs are much more commonly appropriate for javascript, where an operation you'd apply can't be reasonably applied to multiple elements - if there's more than one, there's a problem, so a browser highlighting in the console that you've duplicated an ID would be handy. Aug 10, 2021 at 4:47
21

Don't forget that class and ID are not mutually exclusive. There is nothing to stop you from having both! This is sometimes very useful as it allows an item to inherit common styling along with other elements of the same class as well as giving you precise control of that specific item. Another handy technique is to apply multiple classes to the same object (yes, class="someClass someOtherClass" is perfectly valid) For example:

<style>
div.box {
float: left;
border: 1px solid blue;
padding: 1em;
}

div.wide {
width: 40em; 
}

div.narrow {
width: 10em; 
}

div#oddOneOut {
float: right;
}
</style>

<div class="box wide">a wide box</div>
<div class="box narrow">a narrow box</div>
<div class="box wide" id="oddOneOut">an odd box</div>

In theory it is also possible to get CSS to only apply to items that belong to several classes, e.g. div.box.narrow {something: somevalue;} but unfortunately this is not supported in all browsers. Update 2011: Multiple class selectors now have near universal browser support so go ahead and use them!

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    Yes, it seems not many have picked up on that. Shame because it is a very good way to reduce clutter and redundancy in stylesheets! Nov 18, 2008 at 15:50
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    It's also a nice way to dig yourself a nice and deep hole, unless you're careful. ;) As a rule of thumb; classes (or ids for that matter) should never have names descriptive of the look, but rather of function. Mar 9, 2010 at 22:40
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    Got an example of where this would lead to "a nice and deep hole"? Mar 28, 2010 at 14:35
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    Just to warm up an old thread: The div selector in div#oddOneOut is unnecessary. Since the id attribute is unique across the whole page, the #oddOneOut selector will be precise enough to match that element.
    – matewka
    Mar 17, 2014 at 20:15
  • Correct, HTML element name in this case only included for consistency and clarity (I do this sometimes in production CSS as well). Aug 3, 2014 at 0:15
18

Don't forget that you can link to an element that has an ID. This can be very important for accessibility, among the other benefits. This is a good reason why for layout elements like header, navigation, main content, footer, search form and so on, you should always use an ID instead of a Class (or together with a Class).

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    This is a good point, but I'd go so far as saying it's normally bad practice to use an ID for both linking and styling. Linking will always relate to the structure of the page, and maintainability is improved by having logical separation between structure and style. If an element needs to be linked to as well as styled (in a way that requires an ID or class), I'd strongly recommend using the ID for the link and a class for the styling. Except maybe if the styling you want to do with it only makes sense so long as there's only one element styled like this on the page (rare), then use the ID. Aug 10, 2021 at 4:52
7

Another useful resource is the W3C spec on Cascading Order: id selectors are given ten times the weight of class selectors. This is especially important if you plan to override styles depending on different scenarios or state changes. The more specific the initial selector, the more work you have to do to override it in additional declarations.

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    No, not ten times, infinite times! Read the spec again: “Concatenating the three numbers (in a number system with a large base) gives the specificity.” In this sentence, a “large base” is only large enough when one single id overrides any number of class. Jun 18, 2013 at 10:25
4

The practice depends on the 'resolution' of what you're trying to select.

I use classes when I want to change a whole swag of elements. IDs give me a much more fine-grained control which is sometimes necessary.

2

ID selectors have a high specificity, which is often what you need in CSS. The tighter you can get the CSS to apply to exactly what it needs to the less work the CSS renderer has to do in establishing rules.

Design to task, and do so in an OO manner - use classes where the objects are classlike, IDs where you mean to target instances, and treat tag refs as something like interfaces (and beware when you do so!). That's the best practice I can think of.

edit: and yeah MS really shafted CSS with ASP.NET thanks guys!

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    @Tim Meers - so you have no problem with having crippled ID selectors, MS's interpretation of browser-upscaling, it's semantic-breaking controls (the so-called CSS friendly adapters were released for a reason) and it's continued insistence on promoting inline styling? If that's fine with you then king's to you, but personally webforms have been dead to me since MVC was released.
    – annakata
    Aug 12, 2010 at 8:40
  • Web forms have been much improved since version 4. It no-longer malforms html code (including spacing) and you can now use static ID's and turn off viewstate, session state and you can have routing like MVC. You can harness some of the great features of MVC or mix and match :) Jan 29, 2013 at 8:05
2

You should use an "id" when you're always talking about a single (and will always be single) seciton of your site.

Basically, it comes down to semantics.

div.header

That's tells me that you allow multiple "headers" in your site. Perhaps these are sub headers.

div#header

That tells me that you're talking about the single "header section" of your site layout.

EDIT: Here's a semi-old article about a Pure CSS design... if you just scan the CSS examples, you'll see why I use ID's in there: How To: Pure CSS Design

1

I prefer to use Class as the selector, so I can use it with more than one element at the same page. Using the id as the selector, does not allow this, since the id must be unique.

1

IDs are for uniquely identifying elements, Classes are for identifying an element as being part of a class of elements.

In practical terms, id attributes should only be used one per document, class attributes can be used on more than one element on a document.

Check the W3C spec and also the CSS-Discuss page on this issue.

0

Please refer to:

Don’t use ID selectors in CSS: http://screwlewse.com/2010/07/dont-use-id-selectors-in-css/

Don’t use IDs in CSS selectors?: http://oli.jp/2011/ids/

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Use only classes, almost never use IDs if you don't have to worry about speed or compatibility.

Using IDs is bad just like using global variables in Visual Basic code. The reason is that IDs have to be unique which introduces unnecessary and bad dependency between different independent parts of your code. Using something like .page1 .tab1>.field1 is better because you don't have to worry about uniqueness of field1 inside tab1 or uniqueness of tab1 inside page1. With IDs you have to keep registry of your IDs to keep control and avoid collisions.

Use IDs only if you have to, for example href='#name' or if some library requires you to.

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    And if you need a name applied to a unique element, but only use class, what's the diff? Except the class won't be flagged as an error and you may wind up chasing down a bug if you use the same class elsewhere.
    – Rob
    Mar 9, 2010 at 22:42
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    @Adrian: how using #name makes it less nightmare than using .name ? @Rob: right, there is no diff, but the benefit is when you dynamically include one page into another that happens to have same id name or if you combine page components together. How can you write reusable component using IDs unless you duplicate component name inside every ID ? And if you duplicate, what is the point of DOM tree if you are organizing your own tree inside IDs ?
    – alpav
    Mar 10, 2010 at 18:38
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    IDs have a higher specificity than class. Sometimes you want a style to trump other class styles of parent elements. Most of those times, that's when the element is unique to the page, and thus an element ID is very useful.
    – ghoppe
    Mar 10, 2010 at 19:24
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    Lastly, your global variable analogy is flawed. Uniqueness is a feature. An ID is unique to a document and refers to a specific element. Are you saying pointers are bad too?
    – ghoppe
    Mar 10, 2010 at 19:37
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    I truly am missing your point. If I have a dog named Fido and I want to give it a specific command, I do not find it more convenient from a "code organization point of view" to use .myhouse .contents .dog { position: sit } rather than #fido { position: sit }. Using more root elements simply means more difficulties when the page structure changes. What if I insert another div? Now I have to change my css to account for that rather than knowing #fido will be sitting correctly.
    – ghoppe
    Mar 10, 2010 at 19:56

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