Just came across this by Chris Coyier - http://css-tricks.com/examples/CSSTabs/
Can anyone explain me, how does the cla开发者_如何学编程ss .cur get applied to a tab's heading, when we click it? There's no js in it.
It's relying on the CSS3 selector :target. Target are for sections within an html page, like http://www.example.com/page#section (SO uses them to jump to specific answers).
When the target is selected, the target pseudo class take over.
Here it's using z-index tricks to push the sections up and down on top of each other.
That's the general gist of it, I don't know the specifics.
Edit --
The "cur" class isn't applied at all. On the right, each "pane" has all three tabs defined in them, but with the "cur" class "hardcoded" for each pane. The z-indexing brings up the entire pane, with it tabs, to the top, creating the effect. When in fact, it's just 3 divs of HTML.
So there's no magic here (beyond the whole :target pseudo class).
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