21

I'm trying to select a first element of class 'A' in an element with id or class 'B'. I've tried a combination of > + and first-child selectors, since it's not a first element inside class element 'B'. It worked, but ... i'm trying to override some default css and i have no control over the server side and it seems that the class 'A' element is sometimes generated in a different position. Here's an illustration:

<class-C>
  <class-B> might have a different name
      <some-other-classes> structure and element count might differ
      <class-A></class-A> our target
      <class-A></class-A> this shouldn't be affected
      <class-A></class-A> this shouldn't be affected
  </class-B>
</class-C>

Sometimes the name of the class 'B' differs and the elements before 'A' differ as well. So is there any way to select the first occurrence of 'A' in an element 'C'? Because class 'C' is always there. I can't use + > and first-child selectors since the path to first 'A' element differs, but element 'C' is always there and it would be a nice starting point.

3
  • I have a CSS3 selector in mind but support for it is pretty sparse (for example, no IE in existence except IE9 supports it).
    – BoltClock
    Sep 1, 2010 at 6:34
  • Yep, CSS2 would be nice.
    – Marius S.
    Sep 1, 2010 at 6:36
  • For posterity, my new solution still uses CSS3 but this time IE7+ supports it.
    – BoltClock
    Jul 11, 2011 at 13:55

2 Answers 2

42

CSS3 provides the :first-of-type pseudo-class for selecting the first element of its type in relation to its siblings. However it doesn't have a :first-of-class pseudo-class.

As a workaround, if you know the default styles for your other .A elements, you can use an overriding rule with the general sibling combinator ~ to apply styles to them. This way, you sort of "undo" the first rule.

The bad news is that ~ is a CSS3 selector.
The good news is that IE recognizes it starting from IE7, like CSS2's >, so if you're worried about browser compatibility, the only "major browser" this fails on is IE6.

So you have these two rules:

.C > * > .A {
    /* 
     * Style every .A that's a grandchild of .C.
     * This is the element you're looking for.
     */
}

.C > * > .A ~ .A {
    /* 
     * Style only the .A elements following the first .A child
     * of each element that's a child of .C.
     * You need to manually revert/undo the styles in the above rule here.
     */
}

How styles are applied to elements is illustrated below:

<div class="C">
    <!--
    As in the question, this element may have a class other than B.
    Hence the intermediate '*' selector above (I don't know what tag it is).
    -->
    <div class="B">
        <div class="E">Content</div> <!-- [1] -->
        <div class="F">Content</div> <!-- [1] -->
        <div class="A">Content</div> <!-- [2] -->
        <div class="A">Content</div> <!-- [3] -->
    </div>
    <div class="D">
        <div class="A">Content</div> <!-- [2] -->
        <div class="E">Content</div> <!-- [1] -->
        <div class="F">Content</div> <!-- [1] -->
        <div class="A">Content</div> <!-- [3] -->
    </div>
</div>
  1. This element does not have class A. No rules are applied.

  2. This element has class A, so the first rule is applied. However it doesn't have any other such elements occurring before it, which the ~ selector requires, so the second rule is not applied.

  3. This element has class A, so the first rule is applied. It also comes after other elements with the same class under the same parent, as required by ~, so the second rule is also applied. The first rule is overridden.

8
  • 6
    What was I smoking 10 months ago when I wrote using :first-of-type?
    – BoltClock
    Jul 11, 2011 at 13:36
  • 1
    @BoltClock Probably some really strong stuff. ;) Jul 11, 2011 at 14:34
  • 1
    is it possible to reverse the process? and select the last element rather than all but the first ?
    – Renai
    Sep 10, 2011 at 1:13
  • 1
    "Style all but the first .A that's a grandchild of .C" isn't quite accurate. It actually styles all but the (first-in-each-child-of-.C).
    – ndkrempel
    Dec 13, 2013 at 12:09
  • 1
    @oriadam: Because :not() doesn't accept combinators.
    – BoltClock
    May 2, 2016 at 3:35
0

It is probably possible now with :not() + ~ selectors.

.A:not(.A ~ .A) {
  color: red;
}
<div class="C">
  <div class="B">
    <div class="E">Content</div>
    <div class="F">Content</div>
    <div class="A">Target</div>
    <div class="A">Content</div>
  </div>
  <div class="D">
    <div class="A">Target</div>
    <div class="E">Content</div>
    <div class="F">Content</div>
    <div class="A">Content</div>
  </div>
</div>

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