10

I have the following selector:

.post-link[title~=Corporate]

Now I need, instead, to select only elements whose title have the word "Corporate" only at the very beginning, not somewhere else in the title.

So I have two alternatives:

1) create a selector that only checkes at the very beginning of the title and then skip others eventually following or

2) create a selector which can contain a space plus a '|' like:

.post-link[title~=Corporate |]

because in my case all titles begin with

"Keyword |"

(Corporate | i.g.)

But the css is not working any more when I use:

.post-link[title~=Corporate |] 

I also tried:

.post-link[title~=Corporate |]

Does not work. How to do this? I cannot find answers with Google.

Thanks a lot!

Garavani
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2 Answers2

16

Now I need, instead, to select only elements whose title have the word "Corporate" only at the very beginning, not somewhere else in the title.

You can use [title^='Corporate']:

[title^='Corporate'] {
  background: lightgreen;
}
<div title='Corporate foo bar'>Test case 1</div>
<div title='foo Corporate bar'>Test case 2</div>
<div title='Corporate | foobar'>Test case 3</div>

Reference:

E[foo^="bar"]: an E element whose "foo" attribute value begins exactly with the string "bar"

timolawl
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0

This should do it. .post-link[title|="Corporate "]

The |= operator matches beginning.

Tyler Untisz
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  • Thanks for your quick answer. Weird. Doesn’t work in my case. I am checking what could be wrong with my code. – Garavani May 21 '16 at 07:35
  • The difference between `[title^="Sometext"]` and `[title|="Sometext"]` is that the latter needs to be a whole word whereas the first doesn't care about. So only the first one will find `` but both will find `` – MaggusK Jan 29 '20 at 08:30