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Understanding CSS selector priority / specificity

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-22 18:33 出处:网络
I\'d like to understand how CSS selectors work with propert开发者_Go百科y collisions. How is one property selected over another one?

I'd like to understand how CSS selectors work with propert开发者_Go百科y collisions. How is one property selected over another one?

div {
  background-color: red;
}

div.my_class {
  background-color: black;
}

div#my_id {
  background-color: blue;
}

body div {
  background-color: green;
}

body>div {
  background-color: orange;
}

body>div#my_id {
  background-color: pink;
}
<div id="my_id" class="my_class">hello</div>

How does selector priority work?


I'll just toss in a link to the CSS 2.1 spec itself, and how browsers are supposed to calculate specificity:

CSS 2.1 Section 6.4.3:

A selector's specificity is calculated as follows:

  • count 1 if the declaration is from is a 'style' attribute rather than a rule with a selector, 0 otherwise (= a) (In HTML, values of an element's "style" attribute are style sheet rules. These rules have no selectors, so a=1, b=0, c=0, and d=0.)
  • count the number of ID attributes in the selector (= b)
  • count the number of other attributes and pseudo-classes in the selector (= c)
  • count the number of element names and pseudo-elements in the selector (= d)
  • The specificity is based only on the form of the selector. In particular, a selector of the form "[id=p33]" is counted as an attribute selector (a=0, b=0, c=1, d=0), even if the id attribute is defined as an "ID" in the source document's DTD.

Concatenating the four numbers a-b-c-d (in a number system with a large base) gives the specificity.

If the specificities are equal, then CSS 2.1 Section 6.4.1 comes into play:

  1. Finally, sort by order specified: if two declarations have the same weight, origin and specificity, the latter specified wins. Declarations in imported style sheets are considered to be before any declarations in the style sheet itself.

Note that this is talking about when the style is defined, not when it is used. If classes .a and .b have equal specificity, whichever is defined last in the stylesheet(s) wins. <p class="a b">...</p> and <p class="b a">...</p> will be styled identically, based on the definition order of .a and .b.


  1. Element
  2. Class selectors
  3. ID Selectors
  4. Inline styles
  5. !important

In order, 1 is the lowest specificity and 5 is the highest. https://youtu.be/NqDb9GfMXuo will shown details to demo it.


What you are interested in is specificity.

Firebug is a great tool to help inspect this. But other browsers also have built in tools for inspecting the applied CSS rules.


You can refer the full answer here Mozilla documentation

Start from the most specific: id selectors > class selectors > type selectors(normal h1, p tag and so on..) !important always wins, but it is considered a bad practice.See the link above.

The best way is to experiment with it:

  <!-- start class vs id -->
  <p class="class1" id="id1">.class vs #id: The winner is #id</p>

  <!-- upper vs bottom -->
  <p id="id2">the very bottom is the winner</p>

  <!--most specific is the winner -->
  <p id="id3">the most specific</p>

  <!--pseudo and target selector -->
  <h3>pseudo vs type selector</h3>

  <!-- !important is more important! -->
  <h1 id="very-specific">HI! I am very important!</h1>
  </body>

CSS:

#id1{
    color: blue;
}

.class1{
    color: red;
}

#id2{
    color: yellow;
}

#id2{
    color : green;
}

body p#id3{
    color :orange;
}

body p{
    color : purple;
}

body{
    color : black;
}

h3::first-letter {
    color: #ff0000;

}

h3{
    color: CornflowerBlue ; 
}

h1{
    color: gray !important;
}

body h1#very-specific{
    color: red;
}

Here's a test case.

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