Attribute value regular match selectors include the following three types:
- [attr^=”val”]
- [attr$=”val”]
- [attr*=”val”]
These three property selectors are character matches, not word matches. The sharp corner symbol ^, dollar sign $, and asterisk * are special identifiers in regular expressions, indicating pre-match, post-match, and any match respectively.
With these selectors, you can do pretty cool things with pure CSS.
Small ICONS and file type diagrams that display hyperlinks
Use the match selector before [attr^=”val”] to determine the link address type of the element to display the corresponding small icon. The thumbnail that shows the hyperlink looks like this:
[href] {padding-left: 18px; }/* Link address */
[href^="https"].[href^="//"] {
background: url("./images/link.png") no-repeat left;
}
/* Webanchor */
[href^="#"] {
background: url("./images/anchor.png") no-repeat left;
}
/* Mobile phone and email */
[href^="tel:"] {
background: url("./images/tel.png") no-repeat left;
}
[href^="mailto:"] {
background: url("./images/e-mail.png") no-repeat left;
}
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The effect
The [attr$=”val”] match selector is used to display small ICONS of file types. CSS is as follows:
/* Point to a PDF file */
[href$=".pdf"] {
background: url("./images/pdf.png") no-repeat left;
}
/* Download the zip file */
[href$=".zip"] {
background: url("./images/zip.png") no-repeat left;
}
/* Image link */
[href$=".png"].[href$=".gif"].[href$=".jpg"].[href$=".jpeg"].[href$=".webp"] {
background: url("./images/image.png") no-repeat left;
}
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Results the following
CSS property selector search and filtering technology
We can use the attribute selector to assist us to achieve search filtering effects, such as address book, city list, so that high performance, less code.
The HTML structure is as follows:
<input type="search" id="input" placeholder="Enter city name or pinyin" />
<ul>
<li data-search="Chongqing">chongqing</li>
<li data-search="Harbin Haerbin">Harbin.</li>
<li data-search="Changchun Changchun">Changchun city</li>
<li data-search="Changsha city">Changsha city</li>
<li data-search="Shanghai Shanghai">Shanghai</li>
<li data-search="Hangzhou">hangzhou</li>
</ul>
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At this point, when we input content in the input box, as long as according to the input content to dynamically create a section of CSS code can achieve the search matching effect, no need to write their own code for matching verification.
var eleStyle = document.createElement('style');
document.head.appendChild(eleStyle);
// Text input field
input.addEventListener('input'.function() {
var value = this.value.trim();
eleStyle.innerHTML = value ? '[data-search]:not([data-search*="' + value +'"]) { display: none; } ' : ' ';
});
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The end result is as follows
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