It says the difference is that :after is CSS2, while ::after is CSS3. Are there any more important differences?
(I've tried Googling, but the colons seem to throw off the search)
Pseudo-elements were denoted with a single colon in CSS2, but have been changed in CSS3 "in order to establish a discrimination between pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements". For compatibility reasons a single colon is still allowed for the pseudo-elements defined in CSS 1 and CSS2.
5.12.3 The :before and :after pseudo-elements
The ':before' and ':after' pseudo-elements can be used to insert generated content before or after an element's content.
7. Pseudo-elements
[...]
A pseudo-element is made of two colons (
::
) followed by the name of the pseudo-element.This
::
notation is introduced by the current document in order to establish a discrimination between pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements. For compatibility with existing style sheets, user agents must also accept the previous one-colon notation for pseudo-elements introduced in CSS levels 1 and 2 (namely, :first-line, :first-letter, :before and :after). This compatibility is not allowed for the new pseudo-elements introduced in this specification.
::after
won't work in some older browsers (I think IE8 is the only relevant one)
In general, you should use ::after
but there's no harm in using :after
for compatibility, so long as you understand that it is a pseudo-element, not a pseudo-class
On the contrary: ::after WORKS on IE8, while :after won't do it.
::after
is the new syntax, and AFAIK IE8 doesn't support it. OTOH no browser will ignore :after
, for compatibility reasons.