What does the “~” (tilde/squiggle/twiddle) CSS selector mean?

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孤街浪徒
孤街浪徒 2020-11-21 05:13

Searching for the ~ character isn\'t easy. I was looking over some CSS and found this

.check:checked ~ .content {
}

What does

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5条回答
  • 2020-11-21 05:54

    Note that in an attribute selector (e.g., [attr~=value]), the tilde

    Represents an element with an attribute name of attr whose value is a whitespace-separated list of words, one of which is exactly value.

    https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Attribute_selectors

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  • 2020-11-21 05:55

    General sibling combinator

    The general sibling combinator selector is very similar to the adjacent sibling combinator selector. The difference is that the element being selected doesn't need to immediately succeed the first element, but can appear anywhere after it.

    More info

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  • 2020-11-21 05:57

    The ~ selector is in fact the General sibling combinator (renamed to Subsequent-sibling combinator in selectors Level 4):

    The general sibling combinator is made of the "tilde" (U+007E, ~) character that separates two sequences of simple selectors. The elements represented by the two sequences share the same parent in the document tree and the element represented by the first sequence precedes (not necessarily immediately) the element represented by the second one.

    Consider the following example:

    .a ~ .b {
      background-color: powderblue;
    }
    <ul>
      <li class="b">1st</li>
      <li class="a">2nd</li>
      <li>3rd</li>
      <li class="b">4th</li>
      <li class="b">5th</li>
    </ul>

    .a ~ .b matches the 4th and 5th list item because they:

    • Are .b elements
    • Are siblings of .a
    • Appear after .a in HTML source order.

    Likewise, .check:checked ~ .content matches all .content elements that are siblings of .check:checked and appear after it.

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  • 2020-11-21 05:59

    It is General sibling combinator and is explained in @Salaman's answer very well.

    What I did miss is Adjacent sibling combinator which is + and is closely related to ~.

    example would be

    .a + .b {
      background-color: #ff0000;
    }
    
    <ul>
      <li class="a">1st</li>
      <li class="b">2nd</li>
      <li>3rd</li>
      <li class="b">4th</li>
      <li class="a">5th</li>
    </ul>
    
    • Matches elements that are .b
    • Are adjacent to .a
    • After .a in HTML

    In example above it will mark 2nd li but not 4th.

       .a + .b {
         background-color: #ff0000;
       }
    <ul>
      <li class="a">1st</li>
      <li class="b">2nd</li>
      <li>3rd</li>
      <li class="b">4th</li>
      <li class="a">5th</li>
    </ul>

    JSFiddle

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  • 2020-11-21 06:02

    Good to also check the other combinators in the family and to get back to what is this specific one.

    • ul li
    • ul > li
    • ul + ul
    • ul ~ ul

    Example checklist:

    • ul li - Looking inside - Selects all the li elements placed (anywhere) inside the ul; Descendant selector
    • ul > li - Looking inside - Selects only the direct li elements of ul; i.e. it will only select direct children li of ul; Child Selector or Child combinator selector
    • ul + ul - Looking outside - Selects the ul immediately following the ul; It is not looking inside, but looking outside for the immediately following element; Adjacent Sibling Selector
    • ul ~ ul - Looking outside - Selects all the ul which follows the ul doesn't matter where it is, but both ul should be having the same parent; General Sibling Selector

    The one we are looking at here is General Sibling Selector

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