In answering the question "CSS/SCSS Adjacent sibling selector between certain types," in which the OP wanted to have the second-child of a parent-element styled if it, and the preceding sibling, was an element of various types.
I proposed an answer using the matches()
selector (albeit both Firefox and Webkit browsers are – at the time of writing – using vendor-prefixed implementations of the :any()
pseudo-class).
Somewhat as a tradition of times gone by both Internet Explorer and Edge fail to implement any version of the selector, either :any()
or :matches()
, although since it's an experimental feature I can't attach blame for that decision or 'failure.'
However, for compatibility's sake I'd like to ask: is there a means by which SASS might be used to form the appropriate selectors to reliably style the following:
a::before {
content: 'link';
}
span::before {
content: 'span';
}
b::before {
content: 'b';
}
em::before {
content: 'em';
}
:-webkit-any(a, b, span) + :-webkit-any(a, b, span):nth-child(2) {
color: #f90;
}
:-moz-any(a, b, span) + :-moz-any(a, b, span):nth-child(2) {
color: #f90;
}
:matches(a, b, span) + :matches(a, b, span):nth-child(2) {
color: #f90;
}
<div>
<h2>The second element child of each of these following <div> elements should be styled</h2>
<div>
<span></span>
<a href="#"></a>
</div>
<div>
<a href="#"></a>
<span></span>
</div>
<div>
<a href="#"></a>
<span></span>
<span></span>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<h2>The second element child of each of these following <div> elements should <em>not</em> be styled</h2>
<div>
<a href="#"></a>
<em></em>
</div>
<div>
<em></em>
<a href="#"></a>
</div>
</div>
With SASS I'd expect, or at least imagine, that the groupings should be expanded from the following form (though I'm unsure, hence this question, as to how to emulate the :matches()
syntax or what the SASS syntax might be):
:matches(a, b, span) + :matches(a, b, span):nth-child(2) {
color: #f90;
}
Into an explicit selector, such as:
a + a:nth-child(2),
a + b:nth-child(2),
a + span:nth-child(2),
b + a:nth-child(2),
b + b:nth-child(2),
b + span:nth-child(2),
span + a:nth-child(2),
span + b:nth-child(2),
span + span:nth-child(2) {
color: #f90;
}
a::before {
content: 'link';
}
span::before {
content: 'span';
}
b::before {
content: 'b';
}
em::before {
content: 'em';
}
a + a:nth-child(2),
a + b:nth-child(2),
a + span:nth-child(2),
b + a:nth-child(2),
b + b:nth-child(2),
b + span:nth-child(2),
span + a:nth-child(2),
span + b:nth-child(2),
span + span:nth-child(2) {
color: #f90;
}
<div>
<h2>The second element child of each of these following <div> elements should be styled</h2>
<div>
<span></span>
<a href="#"></a>
</div>
<div>
<a href="#"></a>
<span></span>
</div>
<div>
<a href="#"></a>
<span></span>
<span></span>
</div>
</div>
<div>
<h2>The second element child of each of these following <div> elements should <em>not</em> be styled</h2>
<div>
<a href="#"></a>
<em></em>
</div>
<div>
<em></em>
<a href="#"></a>
</div>
</div>
References:
:matches()
in browsers that don't yet understand that selector. :)