Why does .foo a:link, .foo a:visited {} selector override a:hover, a:active {} selector in CSS?

When you first started with CSS, you might have learned about the LoVe-HAte mnemonic for the order in which to specify link selectors (a:link, a:visited, a:hover, a:active). Have you ever wondered why this mnemonic was chosen?

Well, there’s a note in the spec on how the link and dynamic pseudo-classes are treated when multiple rules using all of them apply to the same element, which explains why you need to set link selectors in that order:

Note that the A:hover must be placed after the A:link and A:visited rules, since otherwise the cascading rules will hide the ‘color’ property of the A:hover rule. Similarly, because A:active is placed after A:hover, the active color (lime) will apply when the user both activates and hovers over the A element.

Anyway, the point I’m trying to make above is that all four pseudo-classes, being pseudo-classes, have equal specificity. Everything else about specificity applies. In this case, out of a bunch of equally specific selectors, the last rule is applied. When or how each pseudo-class is triggered is never relevant.

Now, the simple introduction of the .foo selector causes your second set of link/visited rules to override your first set of link/visited styles and the hover/active styles, forcing links in elements with that class to always appear green until you add hover/active styles with the .foo selector.


Sorry if my answer seems stitched-up or slipshod by the way, I’m typing this on my iPhone right now and it’s pretty hard to think out here…

Leave a Comment

tech