:link

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Sara Cope on (Updated on )

The :link selector is a pseudo-class that targets all anchor (<a>) elements on a page that have an href attribute:

a:link {
  color: aquamarine;
}

The example above will change the color of all links to aquamarine.

When used in combination with the :hover pseudo-class, :link must appear first, or else not be defined at all, in order for the :hover styles to work. This is because they are equally specific, so if :link came after, those styles would override the hover styles. Think LOVE and HATE to get the order right.

The :link pseudo-class will target all <a> elements that have an href attribute, even if the href has an empty value. So, in that sense, it is like the attribute selector [href].

Here are some examples to see what will match the :link pseudo-class:

<!-- will be matched -->
<a href="https://css-tricks.com">CSS-Tricks</a>

<!-- invalid HTML, but will still match -->
<a href>CSS-Tricks</a></code>

<!-- will not be matched -->
<a>CSS-Tricks</a>

There are only three HTML elements that accept the href attribute: <a>, <link>, and <area>. Only the <a> element can be styled via the :link pseudo-class. Also, you cannot add the href attribute to another type of element and make it style-able via :link. In other words, if you had the following HTML:

<div href="https://css-tricks.com">CSS-Tricks</div>

The following CSS would have no effect:

div:link {
  color: aquamarine;
}

Again, the HTML would fail validation, since href is not a valid attribute for <div>.

Due to the fact that :link can target only <a> elements, :link styles can be defined in the CSS without the element type selector, like this:

:link {
  color: aquamarine;
}

Also, for all practical purposes when using HTML, the :link pseudo-class is somewhat irrelevant since the same effect can be achieved by simply targeting all <a> elements directly:

a {
  color: aquamarine;
}

However, if there are any <a> elements on the page that don’t have the href attribute set (for example, on legacy pages that used <a name="example">), the above code would target those elements too, and this may not be the desired result.

It should also be pointed out that, starting with CSS2, other document languages (besides HTML) may define other elements, besides anchors, that can be styled via the :link pseudo-class.

Browser support

IEEdgeFirefoxChromeSafariOpera
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Android ChromeAndroid FirefoxAndroid BrowseriOS SafariOpera Mobile
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Source: caniuse