:where()
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since January 2021.
The :where()
CSS pseudo-class function takes a selector list as its argument, and selects any element that can be selected by one of the selectors in that list.
The difference between :where()
and :is()
is that :where()
always has 0 specificity, whereas :is()
takes on the specificity of the most specific selector in its arguments.
Try it
Syntax
The :where()
pseudo-class requires a selector list, a comma-separated list of one or more selectors, as its argument. The list must not contain a pseudo-element, but any other simple, compound, and complex selectors are allowed.
:where(<complex-selector-list>) {
/* ... */
}
Forgiving Selector Parsing
The specification defines :is()
and :where()
as accepting a forgiving selector list.
In CSS when using a selector list, if any of the selectors are invalid then the whole list is deemed invalid. When using :is()
or :where()
instead of the whole list of selectors being deemed invalid if one fails to parse, the incorrect or unsupported selector will be ignored and the others used.
:where(:valid, :unsupported) {
/* … */
}
Will still parse correctly and match :valid
even in browsers which don't support :unsupported
, whereas:
:valid,
:unsupported {
/* … */
}
Will be ignored in browsers which don't support :unsupported
even if they support :valid
.
Examples
Comparing :where() and :is()
This example shows how :where()
works, and also illustrates the difference between :where()
and :is()
.
Take the following HTML:
<article>
<h2>:is()-styled links</h2>
<section class="is-styling">
<p>
Here is my main content. This
<a href="?x=https://mozilla.org">contains a link</a>.
</p>
</section>
<aside class="is-styling">
<p>
Here is my aside content. This
<a href="?x=https://developer.mozilla.org">also contains a link</a>.
</p>
</aside>
<footer class="is-styling">
<p>
This is my footer, also containing
<a href="?x=https://github.com/mdn">a link</a>.
</p>
</footer>
</article>
<article>
<h2>:where()-styled links</h2>
<section class="where-styling">
<p>
Here is my main content. This
<a href="?x=https://mozilla.org">contains a link</a>.
</p>
</section>
<aside class="where-styling">
<p>
Here is my aside content. This
<a href="?x=https://developer.mozilla.org">also contains a link</a>.
</p>
</aside>
<footer class="where-styling">
<p>
This is my footer, also containing
<a href="?x=https://github.com/mdn">a link</a>.
</p>
</footer>
</article>
In this somewhat-contrived example, we have two articles that each contain a section, an aside, and a footer. They differ by the classes used to mark the child elements.
To make selecting the links inside them simpler, but still distinct, we could use :is()
or :where()
, in the following manner:
html {
font-family: sans-serif;
font-size: 150%;
}
:is(section.is-styling, aside.is-styling, footer.is-styling) a {
color: red;
}
:where(section.where-styling, aside.where-styling, footer.where-styling) a {
color: orange;
}
However, what if we later want to override the color of links in the footers using a simple selector?
footer a {
color: blue;
}
This won't work for the red links, because the selectors inside :is()
count towards the specificity of the overall selector, and class selectors have a higher specificity than element selectors.
However, selectors inside :where()
have specificity 0, so the orange footer link will be overridden by our simple selector.
Note: You can also find this example on GitHub; see is-where.
Specifications
Specification |
---|
Selectors Level 4 # zero-matches |
Browser compatibility
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