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Before Selector |
Before Selector
The CSS ::before
selector can be used to insert some content, usually cosmetic, before the content of an element or elements. It is used by attaching ::before
to the element it is to be used on. It is an inline element by default.
Examples
Let's look at some examples:
p::before {
content: "";
border: solid 5px #ccc;
}
span.comment::before {
content: "Comment: ";
color: blue;
}
<p> To infinity and beyond</p>
<p> I am Buzz Lightyear, I come in peace.</p>
<span class="comment"> May the force be with you</span>
<br/>
<span> Do, or do not. There is no try.</span>
In the example above we are prepending a grey border before every paragraph element on a page and we are also prepending the word "Comment: " in blue before every span
element with the class name comment
.
You can check out this demo here https://jsfiddle.net/kxrdswtm/
Definition and Usage
::before
is one of the CSS pseudo-elements selectors, which are used to style specified parts of an element. In this case, we can insert content before some HTML element from CSS. Although we will see the content in the page, it is not part of the Document Object Model (DOM), which means that we cannot manipulate it from JavaScript.
p::before {
content: "Hello, ";
}
<p>World!</p>
This will display Hello, World!
on the page.
String, images, counters, or even an empty string ("", useful for clearfix
) can be inserted into the content
attribute. HTML cannot be inserted.
See A Whole Bunch of Amazing Stuff Pseudo Elements Can Do!
Single-colon vs. Double-colon
There's a bit of discussion about the right way of using pseudo-elements: old style single-colon (:before
), used in CSS specifications 1 and 2, versus CSS3 recommendation, double-colon (::before
), mainly to "establish a discrimination between pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements". But for compatibility reasons, single-colon is still accepted. IE8 supports the single-colon notation only.