How would I select all but the last child using CSS3 selectors?
For example, to get only the last child would be div:nth-last-child(1)
.
You can use the negation pseudo-class :not()
against the :last-child
pseudo-class. Being introduced CSS Selectors Level 3, it doesn't work in IE8 or below:
:not(:last-child) { /* styles */ }
div
in the OP example)
&:not(:last-child) { /* styles * }
inside of the element you want to affect.
Sep 8, 2019 at 11:03
> *:not(:last-child)
Dec 16, 2022 at 13:14
tr:nth-child(2n):not(:last-child) { ... }
You can apply your style to all the div and re-initialize the last one with :last-child:
for example in CSS:
.yourclass{
border: 1px solid blue;
}
.yourclass:last-child{
border: 0;
}
or in SCSS:
.yourclass{
border: 1px solid rgba(255, 255, 255, 1);
&:last-child{
border: 0;
}
}
Edit: I wrote this at a time :not
was not covered by all browsers. Today I would be more balanced and would use this solution in some situations, for instance if you want to override a default behaviour.
Nick Craver's solution works but you can also use this:
:nth-last-child(n+2) { /* Your code here */ }
Chris Coyier of CSS Tricks made a nice :nth tester for this.
:not
pseudo is very expensive. So it might be a good idea to try to avoid it where possible.
Aug 13, 2018 at 12:24
:not
traverses the whole cascade in order to determine if it applies or not (pun intended), so it is expensive by design. You can easily avoid it in any case you can think of.
Apr 1, 2021 at 13:48
There is a :not
selector in css3. Use :not()
with :last-child
inside to select all children except last one. For example, to select all li
in ol
except last li
, use following code.
ol li:not(:last-child) {
color: red
}
<ol>
<li>
foo
</li>
<li>
foo
</li>
<li>
foo
</li>
</ol>
When IE9 comes, it will be easier. A lot of the time though, you can switch the problem to one requiring :first-child and style the opposite side of the element (IE7+).
Using nick craver's solution with selectivizr allows for a cross browser solution (IE6+)
If you're using it within the nesting of the parent then the easiest way is:
&:not(:last-child){
....
}
Example:
.row { //parent
...
...
...
&:not(:last-child){
....
}
}
to find elements from last, use
<style>
ul li:not(:last-child){ color:#a94442}
</style>
Using a more generic selector, you can achieve this as seen below
& > *:not(:last-child) {/* styles here */}
Example
<div class="parent">
<div>Child one</div>
<div>Child two</div>
</div>
This will capture all the child DIV in the parent
Nick Craver's solution gave me what I needed but to make it explicit for those using CSS-in-JS:
const styles = {
yourClass: {
/* Styles for all elements with this class */
'&:not(:last-child)': {
/* Styles for all EXCEPT the last element with this class */
},
},
};
.nav-menu li:not(:last-child){
// write some style here
}
this code should apply the style to all