What's that weight?

Enter the weight of the following CSS selector:

1 / 15

#myId
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What does weight have anything to do with CSS?

Every CSS selector is assigned a weight that the browser uses to resolve conflicts. This is how specificity works in a nutshell.

For example, if we have an <input> element and the following two selectors:

:root #myApp input:required {
  background: blue;
}

body main input {
  background: red;
}

The input will end up being blue because the first selector has more "weight" than the second one.

How are selectors weighted?

A selector is typically can be made up of "smaller" selectors. For example, the first selector in the example above is made up of 4 selectors:

:root
#myApp
input
:required

To get a selector's weight, we group up these "fundamental" selectors into three buckets depending on their type:

The selector's weight is then the total number of selectors in each bucket, written as three numbers:

1-2-1

1-  2-     1
ID  Class  Type

Comparing weights

Selector weights are compared per bucket, from left to right. Going back to our initial example:

/* 1-2-1 */
:root #myApp input:required {
  background: blue;
}

/* 0-0-3 */
body main input {
  background: red;
}

The first selector wins because the second selector doesn't have any selectors in its ID or Class buckets. This shows that not all buckets are made equal — the ID bucket is more important than the Class bucket, and the Class bucket is more important than the Type bucket.

What's in each bucket?

Speaking more generally, the ID bucket only contains ID selectors, and nothing else.

The Class bucket contains not only class selectors, but also attribute selectors like [role='option'] and pseudo-classes like :required.

The Type bucket contains everything else — tag selectors like input and main, and pseudo-elements like ::before and ::selected.

The :not, :is, and :where exceptions

Despite being pseudo-classes, :not, :is, and :where are not part of the Class bucket. Instead, :where doesn't have a weight at all, and :not and :is have a weight equivalent to its argument list.

For example, the following selector will have a weight of 0-0-0 even though there's an ID in it:

:where(#myId)

While the following selector has a weight of 1-0-0 because there's an ID passed to :not:

:not(#myId)

If there are multiple selectors passed to :not or :is, the weight is the weight of the heaviest selector.

Here, the weight of the selector is 1-0-0 because the ID is heavier than the class:

:not(#myId, .class)