284

Is it possible to select, say, every fourth element in a set of elements?

Ex: I have 16 <div> elements... I could write something like.

div:nth-child(4),
div:nth-child(8),
div:nth-child(12),
div:nth-child(16)

is there a better way to do this?

0

4 Answers 4

478

As the name implies, :nth-child() allows you to construct an arithmetic expression using the n variable in addition to constant numbers. You can perform addition (+), subtraction (-) and coefficient multiplication (an where a is an integer, including positive numbers, negative numbers and zero).

Here's how you would rewrite the above selector list:

div:nth-child(4n)

For an explanation on how these arithmetic expressions work, see my answer to this question, as well as the spec.

Note that this answer assumes that all of the child elements within the same parent element are of the same element type, div. If you have any other elements of different types such as h1 or p, you will need to use :nth-of-type() instead of :nth-child() to ensure you only count div elements:

<body>
  <h1></h1>
  <div>1</div>  <div>2</div>
  <div>3</div>  <div>4</div>
  <h2></h2>
  <div>5</div>  <div>6</div>
  <div>7</div>  <div>8</div>
  <h2></h2>
  <div>9</div>  <div>10</div>
  <div>11</div> <div>12</div>
  <h2></h2>
  <div>13</div> <div>14</div>
  <div>15</div> <div>16</div>
</body>

For everything else (classes, attributes, or any combination of these), where you're looking for the nth child that matches an arbitrary selector, you will not be able to do this with a pure CSS selector. See my answer to this question.


By the way, there's not much of a difference between 4n and 4n + 4 with regards to :nth-child(). If you use the n variable, it starts counting at 0. This is what each selector would match:

:nth-child(4n)

4(0) = 0
4(1) = 4
4(2) = 8
4(3) = 12
4(4) = 16
...

:nth-child(4n+4)

4(0) + 4 = 0  + 4 = 4
4(1) + 4 = 4  + 4 = 8
4(2) + 4 = 8  + 4 = 12
4(3) + 4 = 12 + 4 = 16
4(4) + 4 = 16 + 4 = 20
...

As you can see, both selectors will match the same elements as above. In this case, there is no difference.

5
  • I just thought I would add, if you are doing something such as only the fourth then you would need something such as tr td:nth-child(4). Note the lack of any n within brackets
    – WORMSS
    Feb 26, 2014 at 13:50
  • 2
    please note: This works only on element selectors (div, td, img etc), not on class selector like .this
    – Sliq
    Jun 4, 2014 at 13:26
  • @Panique: I think you're confusing :nth-child() with :nth-of-type().
    – BoltClock
    Jun 4, 2014 at 13:29
  • 1
    I created an interactive demo to visually explain how nth-child(n) works: xengravity.com/demo/nth-child. I found the w3 spec to be particularly daunting to beginners on which syntax is allowed; specifically their 'Lexical scanner' section.
    – xengravity
    May 6, 2015 at 14:31
  • 1
    @xengravity: Thanks for sharing! I agree, the grammar isn't beginner-friendly as it was written with implementers in mind and not authors. The spec does provide a number of examples of how to write the syntax, but without accompanying visuals.
    – BoltClock
    May 6, 2015 at 14:35
30
div:nth-child(4n+4) 

See: http://css-tricks.com/how-nth-child-works/

0
22

You need the correct argument for the nth-child pseudo class.

  • The argument should be in the form of an + b to match every ath child starting from b.

  • Both a and b are optional integers and both can be zero or negative.

    • If a is zero then there is no "every ath child" clause.
    • If a is negative then matching is done backwards starting from b.
    • If b is zero or negative then it is possible to write equivalent expression using positive b e.g. 4n+0 is same as 4n+4. Likewise 4n-1 is same as 4n+3.

Examples:

Select every 4th child (4, 8, 12, ...)

li:nth-child(4n) {
  background: yellow;
}
<ol>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
</ol>

Select every 4th child starting from 1 (1, 5, 9, ...)

li:nth-child(4n+1) {
  background: yellow;
}
<ol>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
</ol>

Select every 3rd and 4th child from groups of 4 (3 and 4, 7 and 8, 11 and 12, ...)

/* two selectors are required */
li:nth-child(4n+3),
li:nth-child(4n+4) {
  background: yellow;
}
<ol>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
</ol>

Select first 4 items (4, 3, 2, 1)

/* when a is negative then matching is done backwards  */
li:nth-child(-n+4) {
  background: yellow;
}
<ol>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
  <li>Item</li>
</ol>

12

Try this

div:nth-child(4n+4)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.