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I've been using the :not() pseudo-class to style things without the need to override it with a second unnecessary declaration to undo the first one, but now I came across a weird behaviour where Safari accepts descendant selectors within the :not(), but Chrome doesn't.

I used something like a:not(.blue a).

I searched for answers, but I still don't fully understand the reason.
Are descendant selectors really allowed by the spec?

Here's a demo:

a:not(.blue a) {
  color: red;
}
<div><a>this one should be in red</a></div>
<div class="blue"><a>this one shouldn't</a></div>

http://codepen.io/oscarmarcelo/pen/YqboQJ?editors=1100

Michael Benjamin
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oscarmarcelo
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1 Answers1

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In Selectors Level 3, the answer would be NO. The :not() notation accepts only simple selectors.

6.6.7. The negation pseudo-class

The negation pseudo-class, :not(X), is a functional notation taking a simple selector (excluding the negation pseudo-class itself) as an argument. It represents an element that is not represented by its argument.

What is a simple selector?

From selector syntax:

A simple selector is either a type selector, universal selector, attribute selector, class selector, ID selector, or pseudo-class.

Nothing about a descendant selector.

HOWEVER, in Selectors Level 4, :not() accepts complex selectors, which would include descendant combinators. Browser support is still quite weak for this specification.

Michael Benjamin
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