Reputation: 65232
I'm trying to come up with some good default styling for <input>
s in HTML5 and tried the following:
input::after { display: inline; }
input:valid::after { content: ' ✓ '; color: #ddf0dd; }
input:invalid::after { content: ' ✗ '; color: #f0dddd; }
Alas, the ::after
content never shows up. It's not a problem with double- versus single colons for the pseudo-elements; I've tried both. It's also not a problem with having a pseudo-element and a pseudo-class; I've tried it without the :valid
and :invalid
. I get the same behavior in Chrome, Safari, and Firefox (Firefox doesn't have the :valid
and :invalid
pseudo-classes, but I tried it without those.)
The pseudo-elements work fine on <div>
, <span>
, <p>
, and <q>
elements -- some of which are block elements and some are inline.
So, my question is: why do browsers agree that <input>
s don't have an ::after
? I can't find anything in the spec that would indicate this.
Upvotes: 25
Views: 11826
Reputation: 6195
You can put a span before or after the element. E.g.:
<style>
#firstName:invalid+span:before {
content: "** Not OK **";
color: red;
}
#firstName:valid+span:before {
content: "** OK **";
color: green;
}
</style>
<input type="text"
name="firstName"
id="firstName"
placeholder="John"
required="required"
title="Please enter your first name (e.g. John )"
/><span> </span>
Upvotes: 6
Reputation: 5944
As you can read here http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS21/generate.html, :after only works on elements that have a (document tree) content. <input>
has no content, as well as <img>
or <br>
.
Upvotes: 32
Reputation: 939
Webkit lets you do ::after on input elements. If you want a way to make it work in Firefox you could try using ::after on the input's label rather than the input itself.
Upvotes: 5