CSS :optional
Publikováno: 22.5.2022
A decade ago HTML and CSS added the ability to, at least signal, validation of form fields. The required attribute helped inform users which fields were required, while pattern allowed developers to provide a regular expression to match against an <input>‘s value. Targeting required fields and validation values with just CSS and HTML was very […]
The post CSS :optional appeared first on David Walsh Blog.
A decade ago HTML and CSS added the ability to, at least signal, validation of form fields. The required
attribute helped inform users which fields were required, while pattern
allowed developers to provide a regular expression to match against an <input>
‘s value. Targeting required fields and validation values with just CSS and HTML was very useful.
Did you know that CSS provides :optional
to allow you to style form elements that aren’t required?
input:optional, select:optional, textarea:optional { border: 1px solid #eee; } [required] { border: 1px solid red; }
In a sense, it feels like :optional
represents :not([required])
, but :optional
is limited to just form fields.
The post CSS :optional appeared first on David Walsh Blog.