How to remove a word with CSS [duplicate] - css

How can I replace text with CSS using a method like this:
.pvw-title img[src*="IKON.img"] { visibility:hidden; }
Instead of ( img[src*="IKON.img"] ), I need to use something that can replace text instead.
I have to use [ ] to get it to work.
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
I need to replace "Facts".

Or maybe you could wrap 'Facts' round a <span> as follows:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: 'whatever it is you want to add';
}
<div class="pvw-title"><span>Facts</span></div>

Obligatory: This is a hack: CSS isn't the right place to do this, but in some situations - eg, you have a third party library in an iframe that can only be customized by CSS - this kind of hack is the only option.
You can replace text through CSS. Let's replace a green button that has the word 'hello' with a red button that has the word 'goodbye', using CSS.
Before:
After:
See http://jsfiddle.net/ZBj2m/274/ for a live demo:
Here's our green button:
<button>Hello</button>
button {
background-color: green;
color: black;
padding: 5px;
}
Now let's hide the original element, but add another block element afterwards:
button {
visibility: hidden;
}
button:after {
content:'goodbye';
visibility: visible;
display: block;
position: absolute;
background-color: red;
padding: 5px;
top: 2px;
}
Note:
We explicitly need to mark this as a block element, 'after' elements are inline by default
We need to compensate for the original element by adjusting the pseudo-element's position.
We must hide the original element and display the pseudo element using visibility. Note display: none on the original element doesn't work.

If you're willing to use pseudo elements and let them insert content, you can do the following. It doesn't assume knowledge of the original element and doesn't require additional markup.
.element {
text-indent: -9999px;
line-height: 0; /* Collapse the original line */
}
.element::after {
content: "New text";
text-indent: 0;
display: block;
line-height: initial; /* New content takes up original line height */
}
JSFiddle Example

Based on
mikemaccana’s answer,
this worked for me
button {
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
button:before {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
}
<button>original</button>
§ Absolute positioning
an element that is positioned absolutely is taken out of the flow and thus
takes up no space when placing other elements.

This is simple, short, and effective. No additional HTML is necessary.
.pvw-title { color: transparent; }
.pvw-title:after {
content: "New Text To Replace Old";
color: black; /* set color to original text color */
margin-left: -30px;
/* margin-left equals length of text we're replacing */
}
I had to do this for replacing link text, other than home, for WooCommerce breadcrumbs
Sass/Less
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
&:after {
content: "Store";
color: grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
}
CSS
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
}
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"]&:after {
content: "Store";
color: #child-color-grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}

You can't, well, you can.
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Test";
}
This will insert content after the current content of the element. It doesn't actually replace it, but you can choose for an empty div, and use CSS to add all the content.
But while you more or less can, you shouldn't. Actual content should be put in the document. The content property is mainly intended for small markup, like quotation marks around text that should appear quoted.

In order to use after and hide the original content, you can use this hack:
.pvw-title {
font-size: 0;
}
.pvw-title:after {
font-size: 1rem;
content: 'I am a totally different piece of text!';
}
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
Setting font-size to 0 makes the text disappear without removing the actual element from the viewport. Therefore, the :after selector works and should show on all browsers.

Try using :before and :after. One inserts text after HTML is rendered, and the other inserts before HTML is rendered. If you want to replace text, leave button content empty.
This example sets the button text according to the size of the screen width.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
button:before {
content: 'small screen';
}
#media screen and (min-width: 480px) {
button:before {
content: 'big screen';
}
}
</style>
<body>
<button type="button">xxx</button>
<button type="button"></button>
</body>
Button text:
With :before
big screenxxx
big screen
With :after
xxxbig screen
big screen

I had better luck setting the font-size: 0 of the outer element, and the font-size of the :after selector to whatever I needed.

If you just want to show different texts or images, keep the tag empty and write your content in multiple data attributes like that <span data-text1="Hello" data-text2="Bye"></span>.
Display them with one of the pseudo classes :before {content: attr(data-text1)}
Now you have a bunch of different ways to switch between them. I used them in combination with media queries for a responsive design approach to change the names of my navigation to icons.
jsfiddle demonstration and examples
It may not perfectly answer the question, but it satisfied my needs and maybe others too.

Text replacement with pseudo-elements and CSS visibility
HTML
<p class="replaced">Original Text</p>
CSS
.replaced {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replaced:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "This text replaces the original.";
}

The simplest way I found is by making the element font-size: 0px, then overwrite it with any font size when creating :after pseudo. Example below:
.pvw-title {
font-size:0px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Hello";
font-size:15px !important;
}

This worked for me with inline text. It was tested in Firefox, Safari, Chrome, and Opera.
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur <span>Some Text</span> adipiscing elit.</p>
span {
visibility: hidden;
word-spacing: -999px;
letter-spacing: -999px;
}
span:after {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
word-spacing: normal;
letter-spacing: normal;
}

I use this trick:
.pvw-title {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: 'My New Content';
}
I've even used this to handle internationalization of pages by just changing a base class...
.translate-es .welcome {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.translate-es .welcome:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: '¡Bienvenidos!';
}

Try this way:
IDENTIFIER {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
IDENTIFIER::after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "NEW_CONTENT";
}

This implements a checkbox as a button which shows either Yes or No depending on its 'checked' state. So it demonstrates one way of replacing text using CSS without having to write any code.
It will still behave like a checkbox as far as returning (or not returning) a POST value, but from a display point of view it looks like a toggle button.
The colours may not be to your liking, they're only there to illustrate a point.
The HTML is:
<input type="checkbox" class="yesno" id="testcb" /><label for="testcb"><span></span></label>
...and the CSS is:
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Make the checkbox non-displayable */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno {
display:none;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Set the associated label <span> */
/* the way you want it to look. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span {
display:inline-block;
width:80px;
height:30px;
text-align:center;
vertical-align:middle;
color:#800000;
background-color:white;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
border-color:black;
cursor:pointer;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* By default the content after the */
/* the label <span> is "No" */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span:after {
content:"No";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* content after the label <span> */
/* is "Yes" (which replaces any */
/* existing content). */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* content reverts to the way it was.*/
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span:after {
content:"Yes";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* label <span> looks like this */
/* (which replaces any existing) */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* layout reverts to the way it was. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span {
color:green;
background-color:#C8C8C8;
}
I've only tried it on Firefox, but it's standard CSS so it ought to work elsewhere.

Using a pseudo element, this method doesn't require knowledge of the original element and doesn't require any additional markup.
#someElement{
color: transparent; /* You may need to change this color */
position: relative;
}
#someElement:after { /* Or use :before if that tickles your fancy */
content: "New text";
color: initial;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}

I had an issue where I had to replace the text of link, but I couldn't use JavaScript nor could I directly change the text of a hyperlink as it was compiled down from XML. Also, I couldn't use pseudo elements, or they didn't seem to work when I had tried them.
Basically, I put the text I wanted into a span and put the anchor tag underneath it and wrapped both in a div. I basically moved the anchor tag up via CSS and then made the font transparent. Now when you hover over the span, it "acts" like a link. A really hacky way of doing this, but this is how you can have a link with different text...
This is a fiddle of how I got around this issue
My HTML
<div class="field">
<span>This is your link text</span><br/>
This is your actual link
</div>
My CSS
div.field a {
color: transparent;
position: absolute;
top:1%;
}
div.field span {
display: inline-block;
}
The CSS will need to change based off your requirements, but this is a general way of doing what you are asking.

I found a solution like this where a word, "Dark", would be shortened to just "D" on a smaller screen width. Basically you just make the font size of the original content 0 and have the shortened form as a pseudo element.
In this example the change happens on hover instead:
span {
font-size: 12px;
}
span:after {
display: none;
font-size: 12px;
content: 'D';
color: red;
}
span:hover {
font-size: 0px;
}
span:hover:after {
display: inline;
}
<span>Dark</span>

After eight years, I faced the same challenge when trying to use the Stylish browser extension to change something on a website (not mine). And this time I made it work by looking at the source code using "inspect element" and created the CSS code based on that.
This it what it looked like before:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
This is the same piece of the HTML and the CSS I used to modify the style:
td span[style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;"] {
width: 100px!important;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can run the code above and you will see that it works (tested in Chrome).
This is simply what I wanted back in the days when I asked this question.
I was using some sort of community blog/Myspace similar stuff and the only thing you had when styling your profile was their CSS editor, and that's why I wanted to select it based on the style.
I found the answer here:
Advanced CSS Selector - Select based on styling
CSS selector by inline style attribute

Unlike what I see in every single other answer, you don't need to use pseudo elements in order to replace the content of a tag with an image
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
div.pvw-title { /* No :after or :before required */
content: url("your URL here");
}

Well, as many said this is a hack. However, I'd like to add more up-to-date hack, which takes an advantage of flexbox and rem, i.e.
You don't want to manually position this text to be changed, that's why you'd like to take an advantage of flexbox
You don't want to use padding and/or margin to the text explicitly using px, which for different screen sizes on different devices and browsers might give different output
Here's the solution, in short flexbox makes sure that it's automatically positioned perfectly and rem is more standardized (and automated) alternative for pixels.
CodeSandbox with code below and output in a form of a screenshot, do please read a note below the code!
h1 {
background-color: green;
color: black;
text-align: center;
visibility: hidden;
}
h1:after {
background-color: silver;
color: yellow;
content: "This is my great text AFTER";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
h1:before {
color: blue;
content: "However, this is a longer text to show this example BEFORE";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
Note: for different tags you might need different values of rem, this one has been justified for h1 and only on large screens. However with #media you could easily extend this to mobile devices.

Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Devnote</title>
<style>
.replacedValue {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replacedValue:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p class="replacedValue">Old Text Here</p>
</body>
</html>
Output
Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in

This isn't really possible without tricks. Here is a way that works by replacing the text with an image of text.
.pvw-title{
text-indent: -9999px;
background-image: url(text_image.png)
}
This type of thing is typically done with JavaScript. Here is how it can be done with jQuery:
$('.pvw-title').text('new text');

The way to make this work is to add line-height to the CSS content. This will make the block to be seen above the hidden, thus this will not hide the changed text.
Example with use before:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:before {
content: 'Whatever it is you want to add';
line-height: 1.5em
}

Related

change the text "at" to "v" using css [duplicate]

How can I replace text with CSS using a method like this:
.pvw-title img[src*="IKON.img"] { visibility:hidden; }
Instead of ( img[src*="IKON.img"] ), I need to use something that can replace text instead.
I have to use [ ] to get it to work.
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
I need to replace "Facts".
Or maybe you could wrap 'Facts' round a <span> as follows:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: 'whatever it is you want to add';
}
<div class="pvw-title"><span>Facts</span></div>
Obligatory: This is a hack: CSS isn't the right place to do this, but in some situations - eg, you have a third party library in an iframe that can only be customized by CSS - this kind of hack is the only option.
You can replace text through CSS. Let's replace a green button that has the word 'hello' with a red button that has the word 'goodbye', using CSS.
Before:
After:
See http://jsfiddle.net/ZBj2m/274/ for a live demo:
Here's our green button:
<button>Hello</button>
button {
background-color: green;
color: black;
padding: 5px;
}
Now let's hide the original element, but add another block element afterwards:
button {
visibility: hidden;
}
button:after {
content:'goodbye';
visibility: visible;
display: block;
position: absolute;
background-color: red;
padding: 5px;
top: 2px;
}
Note:
We explicitly need to mark this as a block element, 'after' elements are inline by default
We need to compensate for the original element by adjusting the pseudo-element's position.
We must hide the original element and display the pseudo element using visibility. Note display: none on the original element doesn't work.
If you're willing to use pseudo elements and let them insert content, you can do the following. It doesn't assume knowledge of the original element and doesn't require additional markup.
.element {
text-indent: -9999px;
line-height: 0; /* Collapse the original line */
}
.element::after {
content: "New text";
text-indent: 0;
display: block;
line-height: initial; /* New content takes up original line height */
}
JSFiddle Example
Based on
mikemaccana’s answer,
this worked for me
button {
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
button:before {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
}
<button>original</button>
§ Absolute positioning
an element that is positioned absolutely is taken out of the flow and thus
takes up no space when placing other elements.
This is simple, short, and effective. No additional HTML is necessary.
.pvw-title { color: transparent; }
.pvw-title:after {
content: "New Text To Replace Old";
color: black; /* set color to original text color */
margin-left: -30px;
/* margin-left equals length of text we're replacing */
}
I had to do this for replacing link text, other than home, for WooCommerce breadcrumbs
Sass/Less
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
&:after {
content: "Store";
color: grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
}
CSS
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
}
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"]&:after {
content: "Store";
color: #child-color-grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
You can't, well, you can.
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Test";
}
This will insert content after the current content of the element. It doesn't actually replace it, but you can choose for an empty div, and use CSS to add all the content.
But while you more or less can, you shouldn't. Actual content should be put in the document. The content property is mainly intended for small markup, like quotation marks around text that should appear quoted.
In order to use after and hide the original content, you can use this hack:
.pvw-title {
font-size: 0;
}
.pvw-title:after {
font-size: 1rem;
content: 'I am a totally different piece of text!';
}
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
Setting font-size to 0 makes the text disappear without removing the actual element from the viewport. Therefore, the :after selector works and should show on all browsers.
Try using :before and :after. One inserts text after HTML is rendered, and the other inserts before HTML is rendered. If you want to replace text, leave button content empty.
This example sets the button text according to the size of the screen width.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
button:before {
content: 'small screen';
}
#media screen and (min-width: 480px) {
button:before {
content: 'big screen';
}
}
</style>
<body>
<button type="button">xxx</button>
<button type="button"></button>
</body>
Button text:
With :before
big screenxxx
big screen
With :after
xxxbig screen
big screen
I had better luck setting the font-size: 0 of the outer element, and the font-size of the :after selector to whatever I needed.
If you just want to show different texts or images, keep the tag empty and write your content in multiple data attributes like that <span data-text1="Hello" data-text2="Bye"></span>.
Display them with one of the pseudo classes :before {content: attr(data-text1)}
Now you have a bunch of different ways to switch between them. I used them in combination with media queries for a responsive design approach to change the names of my navigation to icons.
jsfiddle demonstration and examples
It may not perfectly answer the question, but it satisfied my needs and maybe others too.
Text replacement with pseudo-elements and CSS visibility
HTML
<p class="replaced">Original Text</p>
CSS
.replaced {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replaced:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "This text replaces the original.";
}
The simplest way I found is by making the element font-size: 0px, then overwrite it with any font size when creating :after pseudo. Example below:
.pvw-title {
font-size:0px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Hello";
font-size:15px !important;
}
This worked for me with inline text. It was tested in Firefox, Safari, Chrome, and Opera.
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur <span>Some Text</span> adipiscing elit.</p>
span {
visibility: hidden;
word-spacing: -999px;
letter-spacing: -999px;
}
span:after {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
word-spacing: normal;
letter-spacing: normal;
}
I use this trick:
.pvw-title {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: 'My New Content';
}
I've even used this to handle internationalization of pages by just changing a base class...
.translate-es .welcome {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.translate-es .welcome:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: '¡Bienvenidos!';
}
Try this way:
IDENTIFIER {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
IDENTIFIER::after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "NEW_CONTENT";
}
This implements a checkbox as a button which shows either Yes or No depending on its 'checked' state. So it demonstrates one way of replacing text using CSS without having to write any code.
It will still behave like a checkbox as far as returning (or not returning) a POST value, but from a display point of view it looks like a toggle button.
The colours may not be to your liking, they're only there to illustrate a point.
The HTML is:
<input type="checkbox" class="yesno" id="testcb" /><label for="testcb"><span></span></label>
...and the CSS is:
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Make the checkbox non-displayable */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno {
display:none;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Set the associated label <span> */
/* the way you want it to look. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span {
display:inline-block;
width:80px;
height:30px;
text-align:center;
vertical-align:middle;
color:#800000;
background-color:white;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
border-color:black;
cursor:pointer;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* By default the content after the */
/* the label <span> is "No" */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span:after {
content:"No";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* content after the label <span> */
/* is "Yes" (which replaces any */
/* existing content). */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* content reverts to the way it was.*/
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span:after {
content:"Yes";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* label <span> looks like this */
/* (which replaces any existing) */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* layout reverts to the way it was. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span {
color:green;
background-color:#C8C8C8;
}
I've only tried it on Firefox, but it's standard CSS so it ought to work elsewhere.
Using a pseudo element, this method doesn't require knowledge of the original element and doesn't require any additional markup.
#someElement{
color: transparent; /* You may need to change this color */
position: relative;
}
#someElement:after { /* Or use :before if that tickles your fancy */
content: "New text";
color: initial;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}
I had an issue where I had to replace the text of link, but I couldn't use JavaScript nor could I directly change the text of a hyperlink as it was compiled down from XML. Also, I couldn't use pseudo elements, or they didn't seem to work when I had tried them.
Basically, I put the text I wanted into a span and put the anchor tag underneath it and wrapped both in a div. I basically moved the anchor tag up via CSS and then made the font transparent. Now when you hover over the span, it "acts" like a link. A really hacky way of doing this, but this is how you can have a link with different text...
This is a fiddle of how I got around this issue
My HTML
<div class="field">
<span>This is your link text</span><br/>
This is your actual link
</div>
My CSS
div.field a {
color: transparent;
position: absolute;
top:1%;
}
div.field span {
display: inline-block;
}
The CSS will need to change based off your requirements, but this is a general way of doing what you are asking.
I found a solution like this where a word, "Dark", would be shortened to just "D" on a smaller screen width. Basically you just make the font size of the original content 0 and have the shortened form as a pseudo element.
In this example the change happens on hover instead:
span {
font-size: 12px;
}
span:after {
display: none;
font-size: 12px;
content: 'D';
color: red;
}
span:hover {
font-size: 0px;
}
span:hover:after {
display: inline;
}
<span>Dark</span>
After eight years, I faced the same challenge when trying to use the Stylish browser extension to change something on a website (not mine). And this time I made it work by looking at the source code using "inspect element" and created the CSS code based on that.
This it what it looked like before:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
This is the same piece of the HTML and the CSS I used to modify the style:
td span[style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;"] {
width: 100px!important;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can run the code above and you will see that it works (tested in Chrome).
This is simply what I wanted back in the days when I asked this question.
I was using some sort of community blog/Myspace similar stuff and the only thing you had when styling your profile was their CSS editor, and that's why I wanted to select it based on the style.
I found the answer here:
Advanced CSS Selector - Select based on styling
CSS selector by inline style attribute
Unlike what I see in every single other answer, you don't need to use pseudo elements in order to replace the content of a tag with an image
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
div.pvw-title { /* No :after or :before required */
content: url("your URL here");
}
Well, as many said this is a hack. However, I'd like to add more up-to-date hack, which takes an advantage of flexbox and rem, i.e.
You don't want to manually position this text to be changed, that's why you'd like to take an advantage of flexbox
You don't want to use padding and/or margin to the text explicitly using px, which for different screen sizes on different devices and browsers might give different output
Here's the solution, in short flexbox makes sure that it's automatically positioned perfectly and rem is more standardized (and automated) alternative for pixels.
CodeSandbox with code below and output in a form of a screenshot, do please read a note below the code!
h1 {
background-color: green;
color: black;
text-align: center;
visibility: hidden;
}
h1:after {
background-color: silver;
color: yellow;
content: "This is my great text AFTER";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
h1:before {
color: blue;
content: "However, this is a longer text to show this example BEFORE";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
Note: for different tags you might need different values of rem, this one has been justified for h1 and only on large screens. However with #media you could easily extend this to mobile devices.
Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Devnote</title>
<style>
.replacedValue {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replacedValue:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p class="replacedValue">Old Text Here</p>
</body>
</html>
Output
Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in
This isn't really possible without tricks. Here is a way that works by replacing the text with an image of text.
.pvw-title{
text-indent: -9999px;
background-image: url(text_image.png)
}
This type of thing is typically done with JavaScript. Here is how it can be done with jQuery:
$('.pvw-title').text('new text');
The way to make this work is to add line-height to the CSS content. This will make the block to be seen above the hidden, thus this will not hide the changed text.
Example with use before:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:before {
content: 'Whatever it is you want to add';
line-height: 1.5em
}

CSS Replace Text [duplicate]

How can I replace text with CSS using a method like this:
.pvw-title img[src*="IKON.img"] { visibility:hidden; }
Instead of ( img[src*="IKON.img"] ), I need to use something that can replace text instead.
I have to use [ ] to get it to work.
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
I need to replace "Facts".
Or maybe you could wrap 'Facts' round a <span> as follows:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: 'whatever it is you want to add';
}
<div class="pvw-title"><span>Facts</span></div>
Obligatory: This is a hack: CSS isn't the right place to do this, but in some situations - eg, you have a third party library in an iframe that can only be customized by CSS - this kind of hack is the only option.
You can replace text through CSS. Let's replace a green button that has the word 'hello' with a red button that has the word 'goodbye', using CSS.
Before:
After:
See http://jsfiddle.net/ZBj2m/274/ for a live demo:
Here's our green button:
<button>Hello</button>
button {
background-color: green;
color: black;
padding: 5px;
}
Now let's hide the original element, but add another block element afterwards:
button {
visibility: hidden;
}
button:after {
content:'goodbye';
visibility: visible;
display: block;
position: absolute;
background-color: red;
padding: 5px;
top: 2px;
}
Note:
We explicitly need to mark this as a block element, 'after' elements are inline by default
We need to compensate for the original element by adjusting the pseudo-element's position.
We must hide the original element and display the pseudo element using visibility. Note display: none on the original element doesn't work.
If you're willing to use pseudo elements and let them insert content, you can do the following. It doesn't assume knowledge of the original element and doesn't require additional markup.
.element {
text-indent: -9999px;
line-height: 0; /* Collapse the original line */
}
.element::after {
content: "New text";
text-indent: 0;
display: block;
line-height: initial; /* New content takes up original line height */
}
JSFiddle Example
Based on
mikemaccana’s answer,
this worked for me
button {
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
button:before {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
}
<button>original</button>
§ Absolute positioning
an element that is positioned absolutely is taken out of the flow and thus
takes up no space when placing other elements.
This is simple, short, and effective. No additional HTML is necessary.
.pvw-title { color: transparent; }
.pvw-title:after {
content: "New Text To Replace Old";
color: black; /* set color to original text color */
margin-left: -30px;
/* margin-left equals length of text we're replacing */
}
I had to do this for replacing link text, other than home, for WooCommerce breadcrumbs
Sass/Less
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
&:after {
content: "Store";
color: grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
}
CSS
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
}
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"]&:after {
content: "Store";
color: #child-color-grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
You can't, well, you can.
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Test";
}
This will insert content after the current content of the element. It doesn't actually replace it, but you can choose for an empty div, and use CSS to add all the content.
But while you more or less can, you shouldn't. Actual content should be put in the document. The content property is mainly intended for small markup, like quotation marks around text that should appear quoted.
In order to use after and hide the original content, you can use this hack:
.pvw-title {
font-size: 0;
}
.pvw-title:after {
font-size: 1rem;
content: 'I am a totally different piece of text!';
}
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
Setting font-size to 0 makes the text disappear without removing the actual element from the viewport. Therefore, the :after selector works and should show on all browsers.
Try using :before and :after. One inserts text after HTML is rendered, and the other inserts before HTML is rendered. If you want to replace text, leave button content empty.
This example sets the button text according to the size of the screen width.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
button:before {
content: 'small screen';
}
#media screen and (min-width: 480px) {
button:before {
content: 'big screen';
}
}
</style>
<body>
<button type="button">xxx</button>
<button type="button"></button>
</body>
Button text:
With :before
big screenxxx
big screen
With :after
xxxbig screen
big screen
I had better luck setting the font-size: 0 of the outer element, and the font-size of the :after selector to whatever I needed.
If you just want to show different texts or images, keep the tag empty and write your content in multiple data attributes like that <span data-text1="Hello" data-text2="Bye"></span>.
Display them with one of the pseudo classes :before {content: attr(data-text1)}
Now you have a bunch of different ways to switch between them. I used them in combination with media queries for a responsive design approach to change the names of my navigation to icons.
jsfiddle demonstration and examples
It may not perfectly answer the question, but it satisfied my needs and maybe others too.
Text replacement with pseudo-elements and CSS visibility
HTML
<p class="replaced">Original Text</p>
CSS
.replaced {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replaced:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "This text replaces the original.";
}
The simplest way I found is by making the element font-size: 0px, then overwrite it with any font size when creating :after pseudo. Example below:
.pvw-title {
font-size:0px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Hello";
font-size:15px !important;
}
This worked for me with inline text. It was tested in Firefox, Safari, Chrome, and Opera.
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur <span>Some Text</span> adipiscing elit.</p>
span {
visibility: hidden;
word-spacing: -999px;
letter-spacing: -999px;
}
span:after {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
word-spacing: normal;
letter-spacing: normal;
}
I use this trick:
.pvw-title {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: 'My New Content';
}
I've even used this to handle internationalization of pages by just changing a base class...
.translate-es .welcome {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.translate-es .welcome:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: '¡Bienvenidos!';
}
Try this way:
IDENTIFIER {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
IDENTIFIER::after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "NEW_CONTENT";
}
This implements a checkbox as a button which shows either Yes or No depending on its 'checked' state. So it demonstrates one way of replacing text using CSS without having to write any code.
It will still behave like a checkbox as far as returning (or not returning) a POST value, but from a display point of view it looks like a toggle button.
The colours may not be to your liking, they're only there to illustrate a point.
The HTML is:
<input type="checkbox" class="yesno" id="testcb" /><label for="testcb"><span></span></label>
...and the CSS is:
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Make the checkbox non-displayable */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno {
display:none;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Set the associated label <span> */
/* the way you want it to look. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span {
display:inline-block;
width:80px;
height:30px;
text-align:center;
vertical-align:middle;
color:#800000;
background-color:white;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
border-color:black;
cursor:pointer;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* By default the content after the */
/* the label <span> is "No" */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span:after {
content:"No";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* content after the label <span> */
/* is "Yes" (which replaces any */
/* existing content). */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* content reverts to the way it was.*/
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span:after {
content:"Yes";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* label <span> looks like this */
/* (which replaces any existing) */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* layout reverts to the way it was. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span {
color:green;
background-color:#C8C8C8;
}
I've only tried it on Firefox, but it's standard CSS so it ought to work elsewhere.
Using a pseudo element, this method doesn't require knowledge of the original element and doesn't require any additional markup.
#someElement{
color: transparent; /* You may need to change this color */
position: relative;
}
#someElement:after { /* Or use :before if that tickles your fancy */
content: "New text";
color: initial;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}
I had an issue where I had to replace the text of link, but I couldn't use JavaScript nor could I directly change the text of a hyperlink as it was compiled down from XML. Also, I couldn't use pseudo elements, or they didn't seem to work when I had tried them.
Basically, I put the text I wanted into a span and put the anchor tag underneath it and wrapped both in a div. I basically moved the anchor tag up via CSS and then made the font transparent. Now when you hover over the span, it "acts" like a link. A really hacky way of doing this, but this is how you can have a link with different text...
This is a fiddle of how I got around this issue
My HTML
<div class="field">
<span>This is your link text</span><br/>
This is your actual link
</div>
My CSS
div.field a {
color: transparent;
position: absolute;
top:1%;
}
div.field span {
display: inline-block;
}
The CSS will need to change based off your requirements, but this is a general way of doing what you are asking.
I found a solution like this where a word, "Dark", would be shortened to just "D" on a smaller screen width. Basically you just make the font size of the original content 0 and have the shortened form as a pseudo element.
In this example the change happens on hover instead:
span {
font-size: 12px;
}
span:after {
display: none;
font-size: 12px;
content: 'D';
color: red;
}
span:hover {
font-size: 0px;
}
span:hover:after {
display: inline;
}
<span>Dark</span>
After eight years, I faced the same challenge when trying to use the Stylish browser extension to change something on a website (not mine). And this time I made it work by looking at the source code using "inspect element" and created the CSS code based on that.
This it what it looked like before:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
This is the same piece of the HTML and the CSS I used to modify the style:
td span[style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;"] {
width: 100px!important;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can run the code above and you will see that it works (tested in Chrome).
This is simply what I wanted back in the days when I asked this question.
I was using some sort of community blog/Myspace similar stuff and the only thing you had when styling your profile was their CSS editor, and that's why I wanted to select it based on the style.
I found the answer here:
Advanced CSS Selector - Select based on styling
CSS selector by inline style attribute
Unlike what I see in every single other answer, you don't need to use pseudo elements in order to replace the content of a tag with an image
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
div.pvw-title { /* No :after or :before required */
content: url("your URL here");
}
Well, as many said this is a hack. However, I'd like to add more up-to-date hack, which takes an advantage of flexbox and rem, i.e.
You don't want to manually position this text to be changed, that's why you'd like to take an advantage of flexbox
You don't want to use padding and/or margin to the text explicitly using px, which for different screen sizes on different devices and browsers might give different output
Here's the solution, in short flexbox makes sure that it's automatically positioned perfectly and rem is more standardized (and automated) alternative for pixels.
CodeSandbox with code below and output in a form of a screenshot, do please read a note below the code!
h1 {
background-color: green;
color: black;
text-align: center;
visibility: hidden;
}
h1:after {
background-color: silver;
color: yellow;
content: "This is my great text AFTER";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
h1:before {
color: blue;
content: "However, this is a longer text to show this example BEFORE";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
Note: for different tags you might need different values of rem, this one has been justified for h1 and only on large screens. However with #media you could easily extend this to mobile devices.
Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Devnote</title>
<style>
.replacedValue {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replacedValue:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p class="replacedValue">Old Text Here</p>
</body>
</html>
Output
Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in
This isn't really possible without tricks. Here is a way that works by replacing the text with an image of text.
.pvw-title{
text-indent: -9999px;
background-image: url(text_image.png)
}
This type of thing is typically done with JavaScript. Here is how it can be done with jQuery:
$('.pvw-title').text('new text');
The way to make this work is to add line-height to the CSS content. This will make the block to be seen above the hidden, thus this will not hide the changed text.
Example with use before:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:before {
content: 'Whatever it is you want to add';
line-height: 1.5em
}

remove heading in css then replace content [duplicate]

How can I replace text with CSS using a method like this:
.pvw-title img[src*="IKON.img"] { visibility:hidden; }
Instead of ( img[src*="IKON.img"] ), I need to use something that can replace text instead.
I have to use [ ] to get it to work.
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
I need to replace "Facts".
Or maybe you could wrap 'Facts' round a <span> as follows:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: 'whatever it is you want to add';
}
<div class="pvw-title"><span>Facts</span></div>
Obligatory: This is a hack: CSS isn't the right place to do this, but in some situations - eg, you have a third party library in an iframe that can only be customized by CSS - this kind of hack is the only option.
You can replace text through CSS. Let's replace a green button that has the word 'hello' with a red button that has the word 'goodbye', using CSS.
Before:
After:
See http://jsfiddle.net/ZBj2m/274/ for a live demo:
Here's our green button:
<button>Hello</button>
button {
background-color: green;
color: black;
padding: 5px;
}
Now let's hide the original element, but add another block element afterwards:
button {
visibility: hidden;
}
button:after {
content:'goodbye';
visibility: visible;
display: block;
position: absolute;
background-color: red;
padding: 5px;
top: 2px;
}
Note:
We explicitly need to mark this as a block element, 'after' elements are inline by default
We need to compensate for the original element by adjusting the pseudo-element's position.
We must hide the original element and display the pseudo element using visibility. Note display: none on the original element doesn't work.
If you're willing to use pseudo elements and let them insert content, you can do the following. It doesn't assume knowledge of the original element and doesn't require additional markup.
.element {
text-indent: -9999px;
line-height: 0; /* Collapse the original line */
}
.element::after {
content: "New text";
text-indent: 0;
display: block;
line-height: initial; /* New content takes up original line height */
}
JSFiddle Example
Based on
mikemaccana’s answer,
this worked for me
button {
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
button:before {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
}
<button>original</button>
§ Absolute positioning
an element that is positioned absolutely is taken out of the flow and thus
takes up no space when placing other elements.
This is simple, short, and effective. No additional HTML is necessary.
.pvw-title { color: transparent; }
.pvw-title:after {
content: "New Text To Replace Old";
color: black; /* set color to original text color */
margin-left: -30px;
/* margin-left equals length of text we're replacing */
}
I had to do this for replacing link text, other than home, for WooCommerce breadcrumbs
Sass/Less
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
&:after {
content: "Store";
color: grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
}
CSS
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
}
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"]&:after {
content: "Store";
color: #child-color-grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
You can't, well, you can.
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Test";
}
This will insert content after the current content of the element. It doesn't actually replace it, but you can choose for an empty div, and use CSS to add all the content.
But while you more or less can, you shouldn't. Actual content should be put in the document. The content property is mainly intended for small markup, like quotation marks around text that should appear quoted.
In order to use after and hide the original content, you can use this hack:
.pvw-title {
font-size: 0;
}
.pvw-title:after {
font-size: 1rem;
content: 'I am a totally different piece of text!';
}
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
Setting font-size to 0 makes the text disappear without removing the actual element from the viewport. Therefore, the :after selector works and should show on all browsers.
Try using :before and :after. One inserts text after HTML is rendered, and the other inserts before HTML is rendered. If you want to replace text, leave button content empty.
This example sets the button text according to the size of the screen width.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
button:before {
content: 'small screen';
}
#media screen and (min-width: 480px) {
button:before {
content: 'big screen';
}
}
</style>
<body>
<button type="button">xxx</button>
<button type="button"></button>
</body>
Button text:
With :before
big screenxxx
big screen
With :after
xxxbig screen
big screen
I had better luck setting the font-size: 0 of the outer element, and the font-size of the :after selector to whatever I needed.
If you just want to show different texts or images, keep the tag empty and write your content in multiple data attributes like that <span data-text1="Hello" data-text2="Bye"></span>.
Display them with one of the pseudo classes :before {content: attr(data-text1)}
Now you have a bunch of different ways to switch between them. I used them in combination with media queries for a responsive design approach to change the names of my navigation to icons.
jsfiddle demonstration and examples
It may not perfectly answer the question, but it satisfied my needs and maybe others too.
Text replacement with pseudo-elements and CSS visibility
HTML
<p class="replaced">Original Text</p>
CSS
.replaced {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replaced:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "This text replaces the original.";
}
The simplest way I found is by making the element font-size: 0px, then overwrite it with any font size when creating :after pseudo. Example below:
.pvw-title {
font-size:0px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Hello";
font-size:15px !important;
}
This worked for me with inline text. It was tested in Firefox, Safari, Chrome, and Opera.
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur <span>Some Text</span> adipiscing elit.</p>
span {
visibility: hidden;
word-spacing: -999px;
letter-spacing: -999px;
}
span:after {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
word-spacing: normal;
letter-spacing: normal;
}
I use this trick:
.pvw-title {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: 'My New Content';
}
I've even used this to handle internationalization of pages by just changing a base class...
.translate-es .welcome {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.translate-es .welcome:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: '¡Bienvenidos!';
}
Try this way:
IDENTIFIER {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
IDENTIFIER::after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "NEW_CONTENT";
}
This implements a checkbox as a button which shows either Yes or No depending on its 'checked' state. So it demonstrates one way of replacing text using CSS without having to write any code.
It will still behave like a checkbox as far as returning (or not returning) a POST value, but from a display point of view it looks like a toggle button.
The colours may not be to your liking, they're only there to illustrate a point.
The HTML is:
<input type="checkbox" class="yesno" id="testcb" /><label for="testcb"><span></span></label>
...and the CSS is:
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Make the checkbox non-displayable */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno {
display:none;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Set the associated label <span> */
/* the way you want it to look. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span {
display:inline-block;
width:80px;
height:30px;
text-align:center;
vertical-align:middle;
color:#800000;
background-color:white;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
border-color:black;
cursor:pointer;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* By default the content after the */
/* the label <span> is "No" */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span:after {
content:"No";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* content after the label <span> */
/* is "Yes" (which replaces any */
/* existing content). */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* content reverts to the way it was.*/
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span:after {
content:"Yes";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* label <span> looks like this */
/* (which replaces any existing) */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* layout reverts to the way it was. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span {
color:green;
background-color:#C8C8C8;
}
I've only tried it on Firefox, but it's standard CSS so it ought to work elsewhere.
Using a pseudo element, this method doesn't require knowledge of the original element and doesn't require any additional markup.
#someElement{
color: transparent; /* You may need to change this color */
position: relative;
}
#someElement:after { /* Or use :before if that tickles your fancy */
content: "New text";
color: initial;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}
I had an issue where I had to replace the text of link, but I couldn't use JavaScript nor could I directly change the text of a hyperlink as it was compiled down from XML. Also, I couldn't use pseudo elements, or they didn't seem to work when I had tried them.
Basically, I put the text I wanted into a span and put the anchor tag underneath it and wrapped both in a div. I basically moved the anchor tag up via CSS and then made the font transparent. Now when you hover over the span, it "acts" like a link. A really hacky way of doing this, but this is how you can have a link with different text...
This is a fiddle of how I got around this issue
My HTML
<div class="field">
<span>This is your link text</span><br/>
This is your actual link
</div>
My CSS
div.field a {
color: transparent;
position: absolute;
top:1%;
}
div.field span {
display: inline-block;
}
The CSS will need to change based off your requirements, but this is a general way of doing what you are asking.
I found a solution like this where a word, "Dark", would be shortened to just "D" on a smaller screen width. Basically you just make the font size of the original content 0 and have the shortened form as a pseudo element.
In this example the change happens on hover instead:
span {
font-size: 12px;
}
span:after {
display: none;
font-size: 12px;
content: 'D';
color: red;
}
span:hover {
font-size: 0px;
}
span:hover:after {
display: inline;
}
<span>Dark</span>
After eight years, I faced the same challenge when trying to use the Stylish browser extension to change something on a website (not mine). And this time I made it work by looking at the source code using "inspect element" and created the CSS code based on that.
This it what it looked like before:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
This is the same piece of the HTML and the CSS I used to modify the style:
td span[style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;"] {
width: 100px!important;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can run the code above and you will see that it works (tested in Chrome).
This is simply what I wanted back in the days when I asked this question.
I was using some sort of community blog/Myspace similar stuff and the only thing you had when styling your profile was their CSS editor, and that's why I wanted to select it based on the style.
I found the answer here:
Advanced CSS Selector - Select based on styling
CSS selector by inline style attribute
Unlike what I see in every single other answer, you don't need to use pseudo elements in order to replace the content of a tag with an image
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
div.pvw-title { /* No :after or :before required */
content: url("your URL here");
}
Well, as many said this is a hack. However, I'd like to add more up-to-date hack, which takes an advantage of flexbox and rem, i.e.
You don't want to manually position this text to be changed, that's why you'd like to take an advantage of flexbox
You don't want to use padding and/or margin to the text explicitly using px, which for different screen sizes on different devices and browsers might give different output
Here's the solution, in short flexbox makes sure that it's automatically positioned perfectly and rem is more standardized (and automated) alternative for pixels.
CodeSandbox with code below and output in a form of a screenshot, do please read a note below the code!
h1 {
background-color: green;
color: black;
text-align: center;
visibility: hidden;
}
h1:after {
background-color: silver;
color: yellow;
content: "This is my great text AFTER";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
h1:before {
color: blue;
content: "However, this is a longer text to show this example BEFORE";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
Note: for different tags you might need different values of rem, this one has been justified for h1 and only on large screens. However with #media you could easily extend this to mobile devices.
Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Devnote</title>
<style>
.replacedValue {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replacedValue:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p class="replacedValue">Old Text Here</p>
</body>
</html>
Output
Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in
This isn't really possible without tricks. Here is a way that works by replacing the text with an image of text.
.pvw-title{
text-indent: -9999px;
background-image: url(text_image.png)
}
This type of thing is typically done with JavaScript. Here is how it can be done with jQuery:
$('.pvw-title').text('new text');
The way to make this work is to add line-height to the CSS content. This will make the block to be seen above the hidden, thus this will not hide the changed text.
Example with use before:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:before {
content: 'Whatever it is you want to add';
line-height: 1.5em
}

Is there a way to rename the nth item in a list with CSS? [duplicate]

How can I replace text with CSS using a method like this:
.pvw-title img[src*="IKON.img"] { visibility:hidden; }
Instead of ( img[src*="IKON.img"] ), I need to use something that can replace text instead.
I have to use [ ] to get it to work.
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
I need to replace "Facts".
Or maybe you could wrap 'Facts' round a <span> as follows:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: 'whatever it is you want to add';
}
<div class="pvw-title"><span>Facts</span></div>
Obligatory: This is a hack: CSS isn't the right place to do this, but in some situations - eg, you have a third party library in an iframe that can only be customized by CSS - this kind of hack is the only option.
You can replace text through CSS. Let's replace a green button that has the word 'hello' with a red button that has the word 'goodbye', using CSS.
Before:
After:
See http://jsfiddle.net/ZBj2m/274/ for a live demo:
Here's our green button:
<button>Hello</button>
button {
background-color: green;
color: black;
padding: 5px;
}
Now let's hide the original element, but add another block element afterwards:
button {
visibility: hidden;
}
button:after {
content:'goodbye';
visibility: visible;
display: block;
position: absolute;
background-color: red;
padding: 5px;
top: 2px;
}
Note:
We explicitly need to mark this as a block element, 'after' elements are inline by default
We need to compensate for the original element by adjusting the pseudo-element's position.
We must hide the original element and display the pseudo element using visibility. Note display: none on the original element doesn't work.
If you're willing to use pseudo elements and let them insert content, you can do the following. It doesn't assume knowledge of the original element and doesn't require additional markup.
.element {
text-indent: -9999px;
line-height: 0; /* Collapse the original line */
}
.element::after {
content: "New text";
text-indent: 0;
display: block;
line-height: initial; /* New content takes up original line height */
}
JSFiddle Example
Based on
mikemaccana’s answer,
this worked for me
button {
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
button:before {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
}
<button>original</button>
§ Absolute positioning
an element that is positioned absolutely is taken out of the flow and thus
takes up no space when placing other elements.
This is simple, short, and effective. No additional HTML is necessary.
.pvw-title { color: transparent; }
.pvw-title:after {
content: "New Text To Replace Old";
color: black; /* set color to original text color */
margin-left: -30px;
/* margin-left equals length of text we're replacing */
}
I had to do this for replacing link text, other than home, for WooCommerce breadcrumbs
Sass/Less
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
&:after {
content: "Store";
color: grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
}
CSS
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
}
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"]&:after {
content: "Store";
color: #child-color-grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
You can't, well, you can.
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Test";
}
This will insert content after the current content of the element. It doesn't actually replace it, but you can choose for an empty div, and use CSS to add all the content.
But while you more or less can, you shouldn't. Actual content should be put in the document. The content property is mainly intended for small markup, like quotation marks around text that should appear quoted.
In order to use after and hide the original content, you can use this hack:
.pvw-title {
font-size: 0;
}
.pvw-title:after {
font-size: 1rem;
content: 'I am a totally different piece of text!';
}
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
Setting font-size to 0 makes the text disappear without removing the actual element from the viewport. Therefore, the :after selector works and should show on all browsers.
Try using :before and :after. One inserts text after HTML is rendered, and the other inserts before HTML is rendered. If you want to replace text, leave button content empty.
This example sets the button text according to the size of the screen width.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
button:before {
content: 'small screen';
}
#media screen and (min-width: 480px) {
button:before {
content: 'big screen';
}
}
</style>
<body>
<button type="button">xxx</button>
<button type="button"></button>
</body>
Button text:
With :before
big screenxxx
big screen
With :after
xxxbig screen
big screen
I had better luck setting the font-size: 0 of the outer element, and the font-size of the :after selector to whatever I needed.
If you just want to show different texts or images, keep the tag empty and write your content in multiple data attributes like that <span data-text1="Hello" data-text2="Bye"></span>.
Display them with one of the pseudo classes :before {content: attr(data-text1)}
Now you have a bunch of different ways to switch between them. I used them in combination with media queries for a responsive design approach to change the names of my navigation to icons.
jsfiddle demonstration and examples
It may not perfectly answer the question, but it satisfied my needs and maybe others too.
Text replacement with pseudo-elements and CSS visibility
HTML
<p class="replaced">Original Text</p>
CSS
.replaced {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replaced:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "This text replaces the original.";
}
The simplest way I found is by making the element font-size: 0px, then overwrite it with any font size when creating :after pseudo. Example below:
.pvw-title {
font-size:0px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Hello";
font-size:15px !important;
}
This worked for me with inline text. It was tested in Firefox, Safari, Chrome, and Opera.
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur <span>Some Text</span> adipiscing elit.</p>
span {
visibility: hidden;
word-spacing: -999px;
letter-spacing: -999px;
}
span:after {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
word-spacing: normal;
letter-spacing: normal;
}
I use this trick:
.pvw-title {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: 'My New Content';
}
I've even used this to handle internationalization of pages by just changing a base class...
.translate-es .welcome {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.translate-es .welcome:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: '¡Bienvenidos!';
}
Try this way:
IDENTIFIER {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
IDENTIFIER::after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "NEW_CONTENT";
}
This implements a checkbox as a button which shows either Yes or No depending on its 'checked' state. So it demonstrates one way of replacing text using CSS without having to write any code.
It will still behave like a checkbox as far as returning (or not returning) a POST value, but from a display point of view it looks like a toggle button.
The colours may not be to your liking, they're only there to illustrate a point.
The HTML is:
<input type="checkbox" class="yesno" id="testcb" /><label for="testcb"><span></span></label>
...and the CSS is:
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Make the checkbox non-displayable */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno {
display:none;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Set the associated label <span> */
/* the way you want it to look. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span {
display:inline-block;
width:80px;
height:30px;
text-align:center;
vertical-align:middle;
color:#800000;
background-color:white;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
border-color:black;
cursor:pointer;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* By default the content after the */
/* the label <span> is "No" */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span:after {
content:"No";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* content after the label <span> */
/* is "Yes" (which replaces any */
/* existing content). */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* content reverts to the way it was.*/
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span:after {
content:"Yes";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* label <span> looks like this */
/* (which replaces any existing) */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* layout reverts to the way it was. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span {
color:green;
background-color:#C8C8C8;
}
I've only tried it on Firefox, but it's standard CSS so it ought to work elsewhere.
Using a pseudo element, this method doesn't require knowledge of the original element and doesn't require any additional markup.
#someElement{
color: transparent; /* You may need to change this color */
position: relative;
}
#someElement:after { /* Or use :before if that tickles your fancy */
content: "New text";
color: initial;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}
I had an issue where I had to replace the text of link, but I couldn't use JavaScript nor could I directly change the text of a hyperlink as it was compiled down from XML. Also, I couldn't use pseudo elements, or they didn't seem to work when I had tried them.
Basically, I put the text I wanted into a span and put the anchor tag underneath it and wrapped both in a div. I basically moved the anchor tag up via CSS and then made the font transparent. Now when you hover over the span, it "acts" like a link. A really hacky way of doing this, but this is how you can have a link with different text...
This is a fiddle of how I got around this issue
My HTML
<div class="field">
<span>This is your link text</span><br/>
This is your actual link
</div>
My CSS
div.field a {
color: transparent;
position: absolute;
top:1%;
}
div.field span {
display: inline-block;
}
The CSS will need to change based off your requirements, but this is a general way of doing what you are asking.
I found a solution like this where a word, "Dark", would be shortened to just "D" on a smaller screen width. Basically you just make the font size of the original content 0 and have the shortened form as a pseudo element.
In this example the change happens on hover instead:
span {
font-size: 12px;
}
span:after {
display: none;
font-size: 12px;
content: 'D';
color: red;
}
span:hover {
font-size: 0px;
}
span:hover:after {
display: inline;
}
<span>Dark</span>
After eight years, I faced the same challenge when trying to use the Stylish browser extension to change something on a website (not mine). And this time I made it work by looking at the source code using "inspect element" and created the CSS code based on that.
This it what it looked like before:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
This is the same piece of the HTML and the CSS I used to modify the style:
td span[style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;"] {
width: 100px!important;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can run the code above and you will see that it works (tested in Chrome).
This is simply what I wanted back in the days when I asked this question.
I was using some sort of community blog/Myspace similar stuff and the only thing you had when styling your profile was their CSS editor, and that's why I wanted to select it based on the style.
I found the answer here:
Advanced CSS Selector - Select based on styling
CSS selector by inline style attribute
Unlike what I see in every single other answer, you don't need to use pseudo elements in order to replace the content of a tag with an image
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
div.pvw-title { /* No :after or :before required */
content: url("your URL here");
}
Well, as many said this is a hack. However, I'd like to add more up-to-date hack, which takes an advantage of flexbox and rem, i.e.
You don't want to manually position this text to be changed, that's why you'd like to take an advantage of flexbox
You don't want to use padding and/or margin to the text explicitly using px, which for different screen sizes on different devices and browsers might give different output
Here's the solution, in short flexbox makes sure that it's automatically positioned perfectly and rem is more standardized (and automated) alternative for pixels.
CodeSandbox with code below and output in a form of a screenshot, do please read a note below the code!
h1 {
background-color: green;
color: black;
text-align: center;
visibility: hidden;
}
h1:after {
background-color: silver;
color: yellow;
content: "This is my great text AFTER";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
h1:before {
color: blue;
content: "However, this is a longer text to show this example BEFORE";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
Note: for different tags you might need different values of rem, this one has been justified for h1 and only on large screens. However with #media you could easily extend this to mobile devices.
Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Devnote</title>
<style>
.replacedValue {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replacedValue:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p class="replacedValue">Old Text Here</p>
</body>
</html>
Output
Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in
This isn't really possible without tricks. Here is a way that works by replacing the text with an image of text.
.pvw-title{
text-indent: -9999px;
background-image: url(text_image.png)
}
This type of thing is typically done with JavaScript. Here is how it can be done with jQuery:
$('.pvw-title').text('new text');
The way to make this work is to add line-height to the CSS content. This will make the block to be seen above the hidden, thus this will not hide the changed text.
Example with use before:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:before {
content: 'Whatever it is you want to add';
line-height: 1.5em
}

How can I replace text with CSS?

How can I replace text with CSS using a method like this:
.pvw-title img[src*="IKON.img"] { visibility:hidden; }
Instead of ( img[src*="IKON.img"] ), I need to use something that can replace text instead.
I have to use [ ] to get it to work.
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
I need to replace "Facts".
Or maybe you could wrap 'Facts' round a <span> as follows:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: 'whatever it is you want to add';
}
<div class="pvw-title"><span>Facts</span></div>
Obligatory: This is a hack: CSS isn't the right place to do this, but in some situations - eg, you have a third party library in an iframe that can only be customized by CSS - this kind of hack is the only option.
You can replace text through CSS. Let's replace a green button that has the word 'hello' with a red button that has the word 'goodbye', using CSS.
Before:
After:
See http://jsfiddle.net/ZBj2m/274/ for a live demo:
Here's our green button:
<button>Hello</button>
button {
background-color: green;
color: black;
padding: 5px;
}
Now let's hide the original element, but add another block element afterwards:
button {
visibility: hidden;
}
button:after {
content:'goodbye';
visibility: visible;
display: block;
position: absolute;
background-color: red;
padding: 5px;
top: 2px;
}
Note:
We explicitly need to mark this as a block element, 'after' elements are inline by default
We need to compensate for the original element by adjusting the pseudo-element's position.
We must hide the original element and display the pseudo element using visibility. Note display: none on the original element doesn't work.
If you're willing to use pseudo elements and let them insert content, you can do the following. It doesn't assume knowledge of the original element and doesn't require additional markup.
.element {
text-indent: -9999px;
line-height: 0; /* Collapse the original line */
}
.element::after {
content: "New text";
text-indent: 0;
display: block;
line-height: initial; /* New content takes up original line height */
}
JSFiddle Example
Based on
mikemaccana’s answer,
this worked for me
button {
position: absolute;
visibility: hidden;
}
button:before {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
}
<button>original</button>
§ Absolute positioning
an element that is positioned absolutely is taken out of the flow and thus
takes up no space when placing other elements.
This is simple, short, and effective. No additional HTML is necessary.
.pvw-title { color: transparent; }
.pvw-title:after {
content: "New Text To Replace Old";
color: black; /* set color to original text color */
margin-left: -30px;
/* margin-left equals length of text we're replacing */
}
I had to do this for replacing link text, other than home, for WooCommerce breadcrumbs
Sass/Less
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
&:after {
content: "Store";
color: grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
}
CSS
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"] {
color: transparent;
}
body.woocommerce .woocommerce-breadcrumb > a[href$="/shop/"]&:after {
content: "Store";
color: #child-color-grey;
margin-left: -30px;
}
You can't, well, you can.
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Test";
}
This will insert content after the current content of the element. It doesn't actually replace it, but you can choose for an empty div, and use CSS to add all the content.
But while you more or less can, you shouldn't. Actual content should be put in the document. The content property is mainly intended for small markup, like quotation marks around text that should appear quoted.
In order to use after and hide the original content, you can use this hack:
.pvw-title {
font-size: 0;
}
.pvw-title:after {
font-size: 1rem;
content: 'I am a totally different piece of text!';
}
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
Setting font-size to 0 makes the text disappear without removing the actual element from the viewport. Therefore, the :after selector works and should show on all browsers.
Try using :before and :after. One inserts text after HTML is rendered, and the other inserts before HTML is rendered. If you want to replace text, leave button content empty.
This example sets the button text according to the size of the screen width.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
<style>
button:before {
content: 'small screen';
}
#media screen and (min-width: 480px) {
button:before {
content: 'big screen';
}
}
</style>
<body>
<button type="button">xxx</button>
<button type="button"></button>
</body>
Button text:
With :before
big screenxxx
big screen
With :after
xxxbig screen
big screen
I had better luck setting the font-size: 0 of the outer element, and the font-size of the :after selector to whatever I needed.
If you just want to show different texts or images, keep the tag empty and write your content in multiple data attributes like that <span data-text1="Hello" data-text2="Bye"></span>.
Display them with one of the pseudo classes :before {content: attr(data-text1)}
Now you have a bunch of different ways to switch between them. I used them in combination with media queries for a responsive design approach to change the names of my navigation to icons.
jsfiddle demonstration and examples
It may not perfectly answer the question, but it satisfied my needs and maybe others too.
Text replacement with pseudo-elements and CSS visibility
HTML
<p class="replaced">Original Text</p>
CSS
.replaced {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replaced:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "This text replaces the original.";
}
The simplest way I found is by making the element font-size: 0px, then overwrite it with any font size when creating :after pseudo. Example below:
.pvw-title {
font-size:0px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
content: "Hello";
font-size:15px !important;
}
This worked for me with inline text. It was tested in Firefox, Safari, Chrome, and Opera.
<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur <span>Some Text</span> adipiscing elit.</p>
span {
visibility: hidden;
word-spacing: -999px;
letter-spacing: -999px;
}
span:after {
content: "goodbye";
visibility: visible;
word-spacing: normal;
letter-spacing: normal;
}
I use this trick:
.pvw-title {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.pvw-title:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: 'My New Content';
}
I've even used this to handle internationalization of pages by just changing a base class...
.translate-es .welcome {
text-indent: -999px;
}
.translate-es .welcome:after {
text-indent: 0px;
float: left;
content: '¡Bienvenidos!';
}
Try this way:
IDENTIFIER {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
IDENTIFIER::after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "NEW_CONTENT";
}
This implements a checkbox as a button which shows either Yes or No depending on its 'checked' state. So it demonstrates one way of replacing text using CSS without having to write any code.
It will still behave like a checkbox as far as returning (or not returning) a POST value, but from a display point of view it looks like a toggle button.
The colours may not be to your liking, they're only there to illustrate a point.
The HTML is:
<input type="checkbox" class="yesno" id="testcb" /><label for="testcb"><span></span></label>
...and the CSS is:
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Make the checkbox non-displayable */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno {
display:none;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* Set the associated label <span> */
/* the way you want it to look. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span {
display:inline-block;
width:80px;
height:30px;
text-align:center;
vertical-align:middle;
color:#800000;
background-color:white;
border-style:solid;
border-width:1px;
border-color:black;
cursor:pointer;
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* By default the content after the */
/* the label <span> is "No" */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno+label span:after {
content:"No";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* content after the label <span> */
/* is "Yes" (which replaces any */
/* existing content). */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* content reverts to the way it was.*/
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span:after {
content:"Yes";
}
/* --------------------------------- */
/* When the box is checked the */
/* label <span> looks like this */
/* (which replaces any existing) */
/* When the box becomes unchecked the*/
/* layout reverts to the way it was. */
/* --------------------------------- */
input[type="checkbox"].yesno:checked+label span {
color:green;
background-color:#C8C8C8;
}
I've only tried it on Firefox, but it's standard CSS so it ought to work elsewhere.
Using a pseudo element, this method doesn't require knowledge of the original element and doesn't require any additional markup.
#someElement{
color: transparent; /* You may need to change this color */
position: relative;
}
#someElement:after { /* Or use :before if that tickles your fancy */
content: "New text";
color: initial;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
}
I had an issue where I had to replace the text of link, but I couldn't use JavaScript nor could I directly change the text of a hyperlink as it was compiled down from XML. Also, I couldn't use pseudo elements, or they didn't seem to work when I had tried them.
Basically, I put the text I wanted into a span and put the anchor tag underneath it and wrapped both in a div. I basically moved the anchor tag up via CSS and then made the font transparent. Now when you hover over the span, it "acts" like a link. A really hacky way of doing this, but this is how you can have a link with different text...
This is a fiddle of how I got around this issue
My HTML
<div class="field">
<span>This is your link text</span><br/>
This is your actual link
</div>
My CSS
div.field a {
color: transparent;
position: absolute;
top:1%;
}
div.field span {
display: inline-block;
}
The CSS will need to change based off your requirements, but this is a general way of doing what you are asking.
I found a solution like this where a word, "Dark", would be shortened to just "D" on a smaller screen width. Basically you just make the font size of the original content 0 and have the shortened form as a pseudo element.
In this example the change happens on hover instead:
span {
font-size: 12px;
}
span:after {
display: none;
font-size: 12px;
content: 'D';
color: red;
}
span:hover {
font-size: 0px;
}
span:hover:after {
display: inline;
}
<span>Dark</span>
After eight years, I faced the same challenge when trying to use the Stylish browser extension to change something on a website (not mine). And this time I made it work by looking at the source code using "inspect element" and created the CSS code based on that.
This it what it looked like before:
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
This is the same piece of the HTML and the CSS I used to modify the style:
td span[style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;"] {
width: 100px!important;
}
<table>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td role="gridcell">
<span title="In progress" style="background-color: #e2047a;color:White;margin:2px;border-radius:2px;padding-left: 2px; padding-right: 2px;text-align: center;width: 45px; display: block;overflow: hidden;text-overflow: ellipsis;">In progress</span>
</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
You can run the code above and you will see that it works (tested in Chrome).
This is simply what I wanted back in the days when I asked this question.
I was using some sort of community blog/Myspace similar stuff and the only thing you had when styling your profile was their CSS editor, and that's why I wanted to select it based on the style.
I found the answer here:
Advanced CSS Selector - Select based on styling
CSS selector by inline style attribute
Unlike what I see in every single other answer, you don't need to use pseudo elements in order to replace the content of a tag with an image
<div class="pvw-title">Facts</div>
div.pvw-title { /* No :after or :before required */
content: url("your URL here");
}
Well, as many said this is a hack. However, I'd like to add more up-to-date hack, which takes an advantage of flexbox and rem, i.e.
You don't want to manually position this text to be changed, that's why you'd like to take an advantage of flexbox
You don't want to use padding and/or margin to the text explicitly using px, which for different screen sizes on different devices and browsers might give different output
Here's the solution, in short flexbox makes sure that it's automatically positioned perfectly and rem is more standardized (and automated) alternative for pixels.
CodeSandbox with code below and output in a form of a screenshot, do please read a note below the code!
h1 {
background-color: green;
color: black;
text-align: center;
visibility: hidden;
}
h1:after {
background-color: silver;
color: yellow;
content: "This is my great text AFTER";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-top: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
h1:before {
color: blue;
content: "However, this is a longer text to show this example BEFORE";
display: flex;
justify-content: center;
margin-bottom: -2.3rem;
visibility: visible;
}
Note: for different tags you might need different values of rem, this one has been justified for h1 and only on large screens. However with #media you could easily extend this to mobile devices.
Example
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Devnote</title>
<style>
.replacedValue {
visibility: hidden;
position: relative;
}
.replacedValue:after {
visibility: visible;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
left: 0;
content: "Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in";
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<p class="replacedValue">Old Text Here</p>
</body>
</html>
Output
Devnote is developer answer solve. devnote.in
This isn't really possible without tricks. Here is a way that works by replacing the text with an image of text.
.pvw-title{
text-indent: -9999px;
background-image: url(text_image.png)
}
This type of thing is typically done with JavaScript. Here is how it can be done with jQuery:
$('.pvw-title').text('new text');
The way to make this work is to add line-height to the CSS content. This will make the block to be seen above the hidden, thus this will not hide the changed text.
Example with use before:
.pvw-title span {
display: none;
}
.pvw-title:before {
content: 'Whatever it is you want to add';
line-height: 1.5em
}

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