$ gnpm install css-has-pseudo
PostCSS Has Pseudo lets you style elements relative to other elements in CSS, following the Selectors Level 4 specification.
.title:has(+ p) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
/* becomes */
.js-has-pseudo [csstools-has-1a-38-2x-38-30-2t-1m-2w-2p-37-14-17-w-34-15]:not(does-not-exist) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
.title:has(+ p) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
Add PostCSS Has Pseudo to your project:
npm install postcss css-has-pseudo --save-dev
Use it as a PostCSS plugin:
const postcss = require('postcss');
const postcssHasPseudo = require('css-has-pseudo');
postcss([
postcssHasPseudo(/* pluginOptions */)
]).process(YOUR_CSS /*, processOptions */);
PostCSS Has Pseudo runs in all Node environments, with special instructions for:
The preserve
option determines whether the original notation
is preserved. By default the original rules are preserved.
postcssHasPseudo({ preserve: false })
.title:has(+ p) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
/* becomes */
.js-has-pseudo [csstools-has-1a-38-2x-38-30-2t-1m-2w-2p-37-14-17-w-34-15]:not(does-not-exist) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
The specificityMatchingName
option allows you to change the selector that is used to adjust specificity.
The default value is does-not-exist
.
If this is an actual class, id or tag name in your code, you will need to set a different option here.
See how :not
is used to modify specificity.
postcssHasPseudo({ specificityMatchingName: 'something-random' })
Before :
.x:has(> #a:hover) {
order: 11;
}
After :
[csstools-has-1a-3c-1m-2w-2p-37-14-1q-w-z-2p-1m-2w-33-3a-2t-36-15]:not(#does-not-exist):not(.does-not-exist) {
order: 11;
}
:has
transforms will result in at least one attribute selector with specificity 0, 1, 0
.
If your selector only has tags we won't be able to match the original specificity.
Before :
figure:has(> img)
After :
[csstools-has-2u-2x-2v-39-36-2t-1m-2w-2p-37-14-1q-w-2x-31-2v-15]:not(does-not-exist):not(does-not-exist)
As selectors are encoded, this plugin (or postcss-preset-env
) must be run after any other plugin that transforms selectors.
If other plugins are used, you need to place these in your config before postcss-preset-env
or css-has-pseudo
.
Please let us know if you have issues with plugins that transform selectors. Then we can investigate and maybe fix these.
// initialize prefersColorScheme (applies the current OS color scheme, if available)
import cssHasPseudo from 'css-has-pseudo/browser';
cssHasPseudo(document);
or
<!-- When using a CDN url you will have to manually update the version number -->
<script src="https://unpkg.com/css-has-pseudo@5.0.2/dist/browser-global.js"></script>
<script>cssHasPseudo(document)</script>
⚠️ Please use a versioned url, like this : https://unpkg.com/css-has-pseudo@5.0.2/dist/browser-global.js
Without the version, you might unexpectedly get a new major version of the library with breaking changes.
PostCSS Has Pseudo works in all major browsers, including Internet Explorer 11. With a Mutation Observer polyfill, the script will work down to Internet Explorer 9.
The hover
option determines if :hover
pseudo-class should be tracked.
This is disabled by default because it is an expensive operation.
cssHasPseudo(document, { hover: true });
The observedAttributes
option determines which html attributes are observed.
If you do any client side modification of non-standard attributes and use these in combination with :has()
you should add these here.
cssHasPseudo(document, { observedAttributes: ['something-not-standard'] });
The forcePolyfill
option determines if the polyfill is used even when the browser has native support.
This is needed when you set preserve: false
in the PostCSS plugin config.
cssHasPseudo(document, { forcePolyfill: true });
The debug
option determines if errors are emitted to the console in browser.
By default the polyfill will not emit errors or warnings.
cssHasPseudo(document, { debug: true });
Web API's:
:scope
selectors.ECMA Script:
Array.prototype.filter
Array.prototype.forEach
Array.prototype.indexOf
Array.prototype.join
Array.prototype.map
Array.prototype.splice
RegExp.prototype.exec
String.prototype.match
String.prototype.replace
String.prototype.split
⚠️ Applies to you if you load CSS from a different domain than the page.
In this case the CSS is treated as untrusted and will not be made available to the JavaScript polyfill. The polyfill will not work without applying the correct configuration for CORS.
Example :
page | css | CORS applies |
---|---|---|
https://example.com/ | https://example.com/style.css | no |
https://example.com/ | https://other.com/style.css | yes |
You might see one of these error messages :
Chrome :
DOMException: Failed to read the 'cssRules' property from 'CSSStyleSheet': Cannot access rules
Safari :
SecurityError: Not allowed to access cross-origin stylesheet
Firefox :
DOMException: CSSStyleSheet.cssRules getter: Not allowed to access cross-origin stylesheet
To resolve CORS errors you need to take two steps :
Access-Control-Allow-Origin: <your-value>
when serving your CSS file.crossorigin="anonymous"
to the <link rel="stylesheet">
tag for your CSS file.In a node server setting the HTTP header might look like this :
// http://localhost:8080 is the domain of your page!
res.setHeader('Access-Control-Allow-Origin', 'https://example.com');
You can also configure a wildcard but please be aware that this might be a security risk. It is better to only set the header for the domain you want to allow and only on the responses you want to allow.
HTML might look like this :
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://example.com/styles.css" crossorigin="anonymous">
Given that Next.js imports packages both on the browser and on the server, you need to make sure that the package is only imported on the browser.
As outlined in the Next.js documentation, you need to load the package with a dynamic import:
useEffect(async () => {
const cssHasPseudo = (await import('css-has-pseudo/browser')).default;
cssHasPseudo(document);
}, []);
We recommend you load the polyfill as high up on your Next application as possible, such as your pages/_app.ts
file.
The PostCSS Has Pseudo clones rules containing :has()
,
replacing them with an alternative [csstools-has-]
selector.
.title:has(+ p) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
/* becomes */
.js-has-pseudo [csstools-has-1a-38-2x-38-30-2t-1m-2w-2p-37-14-17-w-34-15]:not(does-not-exist) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
.title:has(+ p) {
margin-bottom: 1.5rem;
}
Next, the browser script adds a [:has]
attribute to
elements otherwise matching :has
natively.
<div class="title" [csstools-has-1a-38-2x-38-30-2t-1m-2w-2p-37-14-17-w-34-15]>
<h1>A title block</h1>
<p>With an extra paragraph</p>
</div>
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