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The :valid
selector allows you to select <input>
elements that contain valid content, as determined by its type
attribute. :valid
is defined in the CSS Selectors Level 3 spec as a “validity pseudo-selector”, meaning it is used to style interactive elements based on an evaluation of user input.
This selector has one particular use: providing a user with feedback while they are interacting with a form on the page. The example below uses CSS to turn the “Email” fields red or green, responding to the whether or not the contents match a valid email address pattern:
See the Pen :valid & :invalid inputs by Chris Coyier (@chriscoyier) on CodePen
Note how the first <input>
(“Email”) is green—valid—even when there is no content in the field. This is because the input is optional, so leaving it blank would result in a valid form submission. To fix this behaviour, the second <input>
has a “required” attribute, which means that a blank field would result in an invalid form submission.
Points of Interest
:valid
can be “chained” with other pseudo-selectors: like:focus
to only validate when the user is typing,:before
or:after
to generate icons or text to provide more user feedback, or attribute selectors likeinput[value=""]
to only validate input fields containing content.
Related Properties
Other Resources
- Mozilla Docs
- QuirksMode article / QuirksMode Selector Compatibly Chart for Mobile
- Dive Into HTML5
- HTML5 Doctor, “HTML5 forms input types”
Browser Support
Chrome | Safari | Firefox | Opera | IE | Android | iOS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
10.0+ | 5.0+ | 4.0+ | 10.0+ | 10+ | 5+ | 2+ |
:valid
was introduced in CSS Selectors Module 3, which means old versions of browsers do not support it. However, modern browser support is getting better. If you require older browser support, either polyfill, or use these selectors in non-critical ways á la progressive enhancement, which is recommended.
My attempt to explain the :valid selector: The :valid selector is basically a pseudo-class which can work together with the input element. Let’s say you use the input element to check if a user types something correct or wrong. Now with the :valid selector you can edit let’s say the color of an input field so the user knows if it is correct or wrong. If a word is typed correctly, the input box becomes green:
Browser compatibility: Chrome 10, Firefox 4, Internet explorer 10, Opera 10, Safari 5. Firefox mobile 4, Opera mobile 10, Safari 5. Here’s a very nice demo from the mozilla website: https://developer.mozilla.org/samples/cssref/input-validation.html
hello
The :valid and :invalid selector respectively aren’t actually parts of the Selectors Level 3 spec, but of Level 4.
After much research and experimenting I found out that a selector with input[value=””] will match when using the “:valid” pseudo class.
http://codepen.io/jnkrois/pen/rVvqjB
which is the valid css selectors?
div
_div
.element
#element
So how about this:
input[type=”text”][value]:not([value=””])
By testing for ‘value’ (but not ’empty’) you won’t have to test for ‘valid’ or combine ‘required’.
Jip, It doesn’t work – as attribute selector refers to xml markup and not the actual — in memory – value of the input that the user has changed