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Is there something like != (not equal) in CSS? e.g, I have the following code:

input {
 ... 
 ...
}

but for some inputs I need to void this. I'd like to do that by adding the class "reset" to the input tag, e.g.

<input class="reset" ... />

and then simply skip this tag from CSS.

How I can do that?

The only way I can see would be to add some class to the input tag, and rewrite the CSS as follows:

input.mod {
 ...
 ...
}
share|improve this question
You answered your question, I think. Put the style in input.mod and add class 'mod' in the desired input tag. – Hoque Jul 28 '10 at 14:44

6 Answers

up vote 44 down vote accepted

In CSS3, you can use the :not() filter, but not all browsers fully support CSS3 yet, so be sure you know what you're doing.

Example:

<input type="text" value="will be matched" />
<input type="text" value="will not be matched" class="avoidme" />
<input type="text" value="will be matched" />

and the CSS

input:not(.avoidme) { background-color: green; }

If you don't want to use CSS3, you can set the style on all elements, and then reset it with a class.

input { background-color: greeen; }
input.avoidme { background-color: white; }
share|improve this answer
OMG... I knew that it's exist :) Yeah, it is! Thanks. – Alex Ivasyuv Jul 28 '10 at 14:45

You can also do that by 'reverting' the changes on the reset class only in CSS.

INPUT { 
    padding: 0px;
}
INPUT.reset {
    padding: 4px;
}
share|improve this answer
5  
+1 for cross browser compatibility – g.b.1981 Aug 2 '11 at 6:57

CSS3 has :not(), but it's not implemented in all browsers yet. It is implemented in the IE9 Platform Preview, however.

input:not(.reset) { }

http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-selectors/#negation

In the meantime, you'll have to stick to the old-fashioned methods.

share|improve this answer

instead of class="reset" you could reverse the logic by having class="valid" You can add this by default and remove the class to reset the style.

So from your example and Tomas'

input.valid {
 ... 
 ...
}

and

<input type="text" value="will be matched" class="valid"/>
<input type="text" value="will not be matched" />
<input type="text" value="will be matched" class="valid"/>
share|improve this answer
2  
I think the whole idea of being able to "reset" by applying to a class was that the number of elements that shouldn't have the default style greatly exceeded the ones that should, so the OP didn't want to apply any class to the majority of the elements. – Tomas Lycken Jul 28 '10 at 17:29

Interesting just tried this for selecting DOM element using JQuery and it works! :)

$("input[class!='bad_class']");

This page has 168 divs which does not have class 'comment-copy'

$("div[class!='comment-copy']").length => 168
$("div[class!='.comment-copy']").length => 168
share|improve this answer

I think you can't with plain css, you will need something like Jquery or Mootools, or a custom library for that.

share|improve this answer
3  
This is a CSS question; there's no need to bring JavaScript libraries into the picture. – Andrew Kozak Sep 18 '12 at 20:36

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