In CSS, selectors are used to target the HTML elements on our web pages that we want to style. There are a wide variety of CSS selectors available, allowing for fine-grained precision when selecting elements to style. In this article and its sub-articles we’ll run through the different types in great detail, seeing how they work. Prerequisites: Basic computer literacy, basic software installed, basic knowledge of working with files, HTML basics (study Introduction to HTML), and an idea of how CSS works (study CSS first steps.) Objective: To learn how CSS selectors work in detail. What is a selector? A CSS selector is the first part of a CSS Rule. It is a pattern of elements and other terms that tell the browser which HTML elements should be selected to have the CSS property values inside the rule applied to them. The element or elements which are selected by the selector are referred to as the subject of the selector. In other articles you may have met some different selectors, and learned that there are selectors that target the document in different ways — for example by selecting an element such as h1, or a class such as .special. In CSS, selectors are defined in the CSS Selectors specification; like any other part of CSS they need to have support in browsers for them to work. The majority of selectors that you will come across are defined in the Level 3 Selectors specification and Level 4 Selectors specification, which are both mature specifications, therefore you will find excellent browser support for these selectors. Selector lists If you have more than one thing which uses the same CSS then the individual selectors can be combined into a selector list so that the rule is applied to all of the individual selectors. For example, if I have the same CSS for an h1 and also a class of .special, I could write this as two separate rules. h1 { color: blue; } .special { color: blue; } Copy to Clipboard I could also combine these into a selector list, by adding a comma between them. h1, .special { color: blue; } Copy to Clipboard White space is valid before or after the comma. You may also find the selectors more readable if each is on a new line. h1, .special { color: blue; } Copy to Clipboard In the live example below try combining the two selectors which have identical declarations. The visual display should be the same after combining them. When you group selectors in this way, if any selector is syntactically invalid, the whole rule will be ignored. In the following example, the invalid class selector rule will be ignored, whereas the h1 would still be styled. h1 { color: blue; } ..special { color: blue; } Copy to Clipboard When combined however, neither the h1 nor the class will be styled as the entire rule is deemed invalid. h1, ..special { color: blue; } Copy to Clipboard Types of selectors There are a few different groupings of selectors, and knowing which type of selector you might need will help you to find the right tool for the job. In this article’s subarticles we will look at the different groups of selectors in more detail. Type, class, and ID selectors This group includes selectors that target an HTML element such as an <h1>. h1 { } Copy to Clipboard It also includes selectors which target a class: .box { } Copy to Clipboard or, an ID: #unique { } Copy to Clipboard Attribute selectors This group of selectors gives you different ways to select elements based on the presence of a certain attribute on an element: a[title] { } Copy to Clipboard Or even make a selection based on the presence of an attribute with a particular value: a[href="https://example.com"] { } Copy to Clipboard Pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements This group of selectors includes pseudo-classes, which style certain states of an element. The :hover pseudo-class for example selects an element only when it is being hovered over by the mouse pointer: a:hover { } Copy to Clipboard It also includes pseudo-elements, which select a certain part of an element rather than the element itself. For example, ::first-line always selects the first line of text inside an element (a <p> in the below case), acting as if a <span> was wrapped around the first formatted line and then selected. p::first-line { } Copy to Clipboard Combinators The final group of selectors combine other selectors in order to target elements within our documents. The following, for example, selects paragraphs that are direct children of <article> elements using the child combinator (>): article > p { } Copy to Clipboard Summary In this article we’ve introduced CSS selectors, which enable you to target particular HTML elements. Next, we’ll take a closer look at type, class, and ID selectors. For a complete list of selectors, see our CSS selectors reference. Overview: Building blocks Next Found a content problem with this page? Edit the page on GitHub. Report the content issue. View the source on GitHub. Want to get more involved? Learn how to contribute. This page was last modified on Feb 23, 2023 by MDN contributors.