24

I'm looking for a way to change the CSS rules of my stylesheet imported in the document. So I have an external stylesheet and some class and div attributes inside. I want to change one of the rules with JavaScript or jQuery.

Here is an example :

.red{
    color:red;
}

So the idea is to do something in JavaScript and the HTML knows that now the color is another color like this:

.red{
    color:purple;
}

But I want to have this rule for every element that I add in the future by the way of append. So if I add a span with the CSS class .red, the text has to be purple and not red.

I hope I made it clear.

3 Answers 3

23

You can inject style declarations into the DOM.

$("head").append('<style>.red { color: purple }</style>');
3
  • 3
    Doing this is generally a bad idea IMO, but I'll upvote as it does exactly what the OP wanted, adds style to all elements, including future ones added to the DOM at a later time.
    – adeneo
    Aug 16, 2012 at 15:47
  • 5
    Interesting - why do you think it's a bad idea - because it's hard to reverse?
    – Grim...
    Aug 16, 2012 at 15:50
  • 2
    @Grim... it can also be hard to track down: depending on the complexity of the JS, it can be really hard to debug why something is not appearing the way you expect it to. There are some cases where this is useful though--I came to this question because I needed to know how to do this for a Greasemonkey script...
    – Kip
    Apr 24, 2014 at 13:55
20

You jQuery .css() method to do that.

$('.red').css('color', 'purple');

For multiple rules:

$('.red').css({
    'color': 'purple',
    'font-size': '20px'
});

When you add dynamic element in future to DOM by the way of append, just give those element some class or id and write CSS rules like above after appending them and they will applied for all dynamically created element.

Working sample

Note

Add dynamic rules is not a good solution in my point of view. Instead of the you can load some external CSS file.

But if you need something like dynamic rules add method then:

$('head').append(
  $('<style/>', {
    id: 'mystyle',
    html: '.red {color: purple }'
  })
);

And for future use:

$('#mystyle').append(' .someother { color: green; font-size: 13px } ');

Working sample

6
  • 4
    Will this satisfy "But I want to have this rule for every element than I add in the futur by the way of append" ?
    – Grim...
    Aug 16, 2012 at 15:04
  • You need a comma after 'myrule', I think. Surely that last part makes the .css() stuff redundant?
    – Grim...
    Aug 16, 2012 at 15:08
  • 1
    Hmm, that doesn't work (at least in Chrome). You need to add .red { color: purple; }, not just color: purple; to the style tags. Doing so would stop the append() from working, too (unless you appended a second .red declaration, I guess).
    – Grim...
    Aug 16, 2012 at 15:13
  • It works perfectly !! Thanks again !! This is exactly what I needed thanks you again !! Sorry for this late response but I was not in front of my computer !! Thanks you again !!
    – Simon
    Aug 16, 2012 at 19:29
  • BTW, I tried with .css before posting the question but it didn't works so I wanted to override my css and see if it could works ! :) Thanks again @thecodeparadox !!
    – Simon
    Aug 16, 2012 at 19:42
9

If you want to add a rule, instead of editing each element's style directly, you can use CSSStyleSheet.insertRule(). It takes two parameters: the rule as a string, and where to insert the rule.

Example from the above link:

// push a new rule onto the top of my stylesheet
myStyle.insertRule("#blanc { color: white }", 0);

In this case, myStyle is the .sheet member of a style element.

As far as I can tell, the style element must be inserted into the document before you can grab its sheet, and it can't be an external sheet. You can also grab a sheet from document.styleSheets, e.g.

var myStyle = document.styleSheets[1]; // Must not be a linked sheet.
myStyle.insertRule("#blanc { color: white }", 0);

Note: The page recommends modifying elements by changing their classes, instead of modifying the rules.

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