What is the difference between '>' and a space in CSS selectors?
What's the point using this syntax
div.card > div.name
What's the difference between this
div.card div.name
Solution 1:
A > B
will only select B that are direct children to A (that is, there are no other elements inbetween).
A B
will select any B that are inside A, even if there are other elements between them.
Solution 2:
>
is the child selector. It specifies only immediate child elements and not any descendant (including grandchildren, grand-grandchildren etc.) as in the second example without the >
.
The child selector is not supported by IE 6 and lower. A great compatibility table is here.
Solution 3:
div.card > div.name
matches <div class='card'>....<div class='name'>xxx</div>...</div>
but it doesn't match <div class='card'>....<div class='foo'> ... <div class='name'>xxx</div>..</div>....</div>
div.card div.name
matches both.
That is, the >
selector makes sure that the selected element on the right side
of the >
is an immidiate child of the element on its left side.
The syntax without the >
matches any <div class='name'>
that is a descendant (not only a child) of <div class='card'>
.
Solution 4:
> vs. Space
Consider the two scenarios div > span { }
vs. div span { }
Here, the
(space) selects all the all the <span>
elements inside <div>
element even if they are nested inside more than one element. The >
selects all the children of <div>
element but if they are not inside another element.
Take a look at two examples:
> (Greater than):
div > span {
color: #FFBA00 ;
}
<body>
<div>
<div>
<span>Hello...</span>
<p><span>Hello!</span></p>
</div>
<span>World!</span>
</div>
</body>
This one just selects the <span>Hello...</span>
(because it's immediately after the nested div
tag), and <span>World!</span>
and it won't look for the <span>
inside <p>
tag because it's not immediately after a div
tag.
Space
div span {
color: #0A0 ;
}
<body>
<div>
<div>
<span>Hello...</span>
<p><span>Hello!</span></p>
</div>
<span>World!</span>
</div>
</body>
This one selects all the span tags, even if they are nested inside other tags.