Sunday, August 2, 2015

CSS Combinators

CSS Combinators

Note A combinator is something that explains the relationship between the selectors.
A CSS selector can contain more than one simple selector. Between the simple selectors, we can include a combinator.
There are four different combinators in CSS3:
  • descendant selector
  • child selector
  • adjacent sibling selector
  • general sibling selector

Descendant Selector

The descendant selector matches all elements that are descendants of a specified element.
The following example selects all <p> elements inside <div> elements: 

Example

div p {
    background-color: yellow;
}


Child Selector

The child selector selects all elements that are the immediate children of a specified element.
The following example selects all <p> elements that are immediate children of a <div> element:

Example

div > p {
    background-color: yellow;
}


Adjacent Sibling Selector

The adjacent sibling selector selects all elements that are the adjacent siblings of a specified element.
Sibling elements must have the same parent element, and "adjacent" means "immediately following".
The following example selects all <p> elements that are placed immediately after <div> elements:

Example

div + p {
    background-color: yellow;
}


General Sibling Selector

The general sibling selector selects all elements that are siblings of a specified element.
The following example selects all <p> elements that are siblings of <div> elements: 

Example

div ~ p {
    background-color: yellow;
}

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