Changing CSS pseudo-element styles via JavaScript [duplicate]
Solution 1:
If you're comfortable with some graceful degradation in older browsers you can use CSS Vars. Definitely the easiest of the methods I've seen here and elsewhere.
So in your CSS you can write:
#editor {
--scrollbar-background: #ccc;
}
#editor::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb:vertical {
/* Fallback */
background-color: #ccc;
/* Dynamic value */
background-color: var(--scrollbar-background);
}
Then in your JS you can manipulate that value on the #editor element:
document.getElementById("#editor").style.setProperty('--scrollbar-background', localStorage.getItem("Color"));
Lots of other examples of manipulating CSS vars with JS here: https://eager.io/blog/communicating-between-javascript-and-css-with-css-variables/
Solution 2:
To edit an existing one which you don't have a direct reference to requires iterating all style sheets on the page and then iterating all rules in each and then string matching the selector.
Here's a reference to a method I posted for adding new CSS for pseudo-elements, the easy version where you're setting from js
Javascript set CSS :after styles
var addRule = (function (style) {
var sheet = document.head.appendChild(style).sheet;
return function (selector, css) {
var propText = typeof css === "string" ? css : Object.keys(css).map(function (p) {
return p + ":" + (p === "content" ? "'" + css[p] + "'" : css[p]);
}).join(";");
sheet.insertRule(selector + "{" + propText + "}", sheet.cssRules.length);
};
})(document.createElement("style"));
addRule("p:before", {
display: "block",
width: "100px",
height: "100px",
background: "red",
"border-radius": "50%",
content: "''"
});
sheet.insertRule
returns the index of the new rule which you can use to get a reference to it for it which can be used later to edit it.
Solution 3:
EDIT: There is technically a way of directly changing CSS pseudo-element styles via JavaScript, as this answer describes, but the method provided here is preferable.
The closest to changing the style of a pseudo-element in JavaScript is adding and removing classes, then using the pseudo-element with those classes. An example to hide the scrollbar:
CSS
.hidden-scrollbar::-webkit-scrollbar {
visibility: hidden;
}
JavaScript
document.getElementById("editor").classList.add('hidden-scrollbar');
To later remove the same class, you could use:
document.getElementById("editor").classList.remove('hidden-scrollbar');