Summary
The ::selection
CSS pseudo-element applies rules to the portion of a document that has been highlighted (e.g., selected with the mouse or another pointing device) by the user.
Only a small subset of CSS properties can be used in a rule using ::selection
in its selector: color, background, background-color and text-shadow. Note that, in particular, background-image is ignored, like any other property.
text-shadow in ::selection
is supported by Chrome and Safari and will be supported in Firefox 17 and above.
Though this pseudo-element was in drafts of CSS Selectors Level 3, it was removed during the Candidate Recommendation phase, as it appeared that its behavior was under-specified, especially with nested elements, and interoperability wasn't achieved (based on discussion in the W3C Style mailing list).
The ::selection
pseudo-element currently isn't in any CSS module on the standard track. It should not be used in production environments.
Examples
Gecko is the only engine requiring the prefix. Due to the fact that the CSS parsing rules require dropping the whole rule when encountering an invalid pseudo-element, two separate rules must be written: ::-moz-selection, ::selection {...}
. The rule would be dropped on non-Gecko browsers as ::-moz-selection
is invalid on them.
/* draw any selected text yellow on red background */ ::-moz-selection { color: gold; background: red; } ::selection { color: gold; background: red; } /* draw selected text in a paragraph white on black */ p::-moz-selection { color: white; background: black; } p::selection { color: white; background: black; }
Specifications
The ::selection
CSS pseudo-element was drafted for CSS Selectors Level 3 but removed before it reached the recommendation status. Despite this, it's implemented in some browsers, which will probably retain experimental support for it.
Right now, the ::selection
CSS pseudo-element is not in any specification on the standard track.