CSS Attribute Selectors

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CSS Attribute Selectors



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Style HTML Elements With Specific Attributes


It is possible to style HTML elements that have specific attributes or attribute values.



CSS [attribute] Selector


The [attribute] selector is used to select elements with a specified
attribute.


The following example selects all <a> elements with a target attribute:



Example



a[target]
    background-color: yellow;

Try it Yourself »


CSS [attribute="value"] Selector


The [attribute="value"] selector is used to select elements with a specified
attribute and value.


The following example selects all <a> elements with a target="_blank" attribute:



Example



a[target="_blank"]
    background-color: yellow;

Try it Yourself »


CSS [attribute~="value"] Selector


The [attribute~="value"] selector is used to select elements with an attribute
value containing a specified word.


The following example selects all elements with a title attribute that
contains a space-separated list of words, one of which is "flower":



Example



[title~="flower"]
    border: 5px solid yellow;

Try it Yourself »

The example above will match elements with title="flower", title="summer
flower", and title="flower new", but not title="my-flower" or title="flowers".








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CSS [attribute|="value"] Selector


The [attribute|="value"] selector is used to select elements with the specified attribute starting with the specified value.


The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that begins with "top":


Note: The value has to be a whole word, either alone, like
class="top", or followed by a hyphen( - ), like class="top-text"! 



Example



[class|="top"]
    background: yellow;

Try it Yourself »


CSS [attribute^="value"] Selector


The [attribute^="value"] selector is used to select elements whose attribute
value begins with a specified value.


The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that begins with "top":


Note: The value does not have to be a whole word! 



Example



[class^="top"]
    background: yellow;

Try it Yourself »


CSS [attribute$="value"] Selector


The [attribute$="value"] selector is used to select elements whose attribute
value ends with a specified value.


The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that
ends with "test":


Note: The value does not have to be a whole word!  



Example



[class$="test"]
    background: yellow;

Try it Yourself »


CSS [attribute*="value"] Selector


The [attribute*="value"] selector is used to select elements whose attribute
value contains a specified value.


The following example selects all elements with a class attribute value that
contains "te":


Note: The value does not have to be a whole word!  



Example



[class*="te"]
    background: yellow;

Try it Yourself »


Styling Forms


The attribute selectors can be useful for styling forms without class or ID:



Example



input[type="text"]


   
width: 150px;

   
display: block;

   
margin-bottom: 10px;

   
background-color: yellow;



input[type="button"]


   
width: 120px;

   
margin-left: 35px;

   
display: block;

Try it Yourself »

Tip: Visit our CSS Forms Tutorial for more examples on how to style forms with CSS.



Test Yourself with Exercises!



Exercise 1 » 
Exercise 2 » 
Exercise 3 » 
Exercise 4 » 
Exercise 5 » 
Exercise 6 »



More Examples of CSS Selectors


Use our CSS Selector Tester to demonstrate the different selectors.


For a complete reference of all the CSS selectors, please go to our CSS Selectors Reference.





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