The ::slotted()
Using templates and slots for more information).
This only works when used inside CSS placed within a shadow DOM. Note that this selector won't select a text node placed into a slot; it only targets actual elements.
The ::slotted()
Using templates and slots for more information).
This only works when used inside CSS placed within a shadow DOM. Note that this selector won't select a text node placed into a slot; it only targets actual elements.
/* This CSS is being applied inside the shadow DOM. */
::slotted(.content) {
background-color: aqua;
}
h2 ::slotted(span) {
background: silver;
}
<template id="card-template">
<div>
<h2><slot name="caption">title goes here</slot></h2>
<slot name="content">content goes here</slot>
</div>
</template>
<my-card>
<span slot="caption">Error</span>
<p class="content" slot="content">Build failed!</p>
</my-card>
customElements.define(
"my-card",
class extends HTMLElement {
constructor() {
super();
const template = document.getElementById("card-template");
const shadow = this.attachShadow({ mode: "open" });
shadow.appendChild(template.content.cloneNode(true));
const elementStyle = document.createElement("style");
elementStyle.textContent = `
div {
width: 200px;
border: 2px dotted red;
border-radius: 4px;
}`;
shadow.appendChild(elementStyle);
const cssTab = document.querySelector("#css-output");
const editorStyle = document.createElement("style");
editorStyle.textContent = cssTab.textContent;
shadow.appendChild(editorStyle);
cssTab.addEventListener("change", () => {
editorStyle.textContent = cssTab.textContent;
});
}
},
);
/* Selects any element placed inside a slot */
::slotted(*) {
font-weight: bold;
}
/* Selects any <span> placed inside a slot */
::slotted(span) {
font-weight: bold;
}
::slotted(<compound-selector>) {
/* ... */
}
In this example, we use a template with three slots:
<template id="person-template">
<div>
<h2>Personal ID Card</h2>
<slot name="person-name">NAME MISSING</slot>
<ul>
<li><slot name="person-age">AGE MISSING</slot></li>
<li><slot name="person-occupation">OCCUPATION MISSING</slot></li>
</ul>
</div>
</template>
We define the <person-details>
custom element. In this case, we add styles with JavaScript, though we could have added them in a <template>
with the same effect:
customElements.define(
"person-details",
class extends HTMLElement {
constructor() {
super();
let template = document.getElementById("person-template");
let templateContent = template.content;
const shadowRoot = this.attachShadow({ mode: "open" });
let style = document.createElement("style");
style.textContent =
"div { padding: 10px; border: 1px solid gray; width: 200px; margin: 10px; }" +
"h2 { margin: 0 0 10px; }" +
"ul { margin: 0; }" +
"p { margin: 10px 0; }" +
"::slotted(*) { color: gray; font-family: sans-serif; } " +
"::slotted(span) {text-decoration: underline;} ";
shadowRoot.appendChild(style);
shadowRoot.appendChild(templateContent.cloneNode(true));
}
},
);
When filling the style
element with content, you'll see that we select all slotted elements (::slotted(*)
) and give them a different font and color. This differentiates them from the slots that haven't been filled. We styled all the slotted <p>
s.
Our markup includes three custom elements, including a custom element with an invalid slot name in a source order that differs from the <template>
:
<person-details>
<p slot="person-name">Wonder Woman</p>
<span slot="person-age">Immortal</span>
<span slot="person-occupation">Superhero</span>
</person-details>
<person-details>
<p slot="person-name">Malala Yousafzai</p>
<span slot="person-age">17</span>
<span slot="person-occupation">Activist</span>
</person-details>
<person-details>
<span slot="person-age">44</span>
<span slot="not-a-slot-name">Time traveler</span>
<p slot="person-name">Dr. Who</p>
</person-details>
Specification |
---|
CSS Scoping Module Level 1 # slotted-pseudo |
BCD tables only load in the browser
:host
:host()
:host-context()
:has-slotted
slot
attribute<slot>
element<template>
element