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The difference between CSS focus and focus-visible pseudo-class

You can browse the Web using a mouse, keyboard and all sorts of assistive technology devices. Whichever input method you use, a clear indication of the current interactive element is crucial for a good user experience and accessibility. Default browsers stylesheets do a great job at it, but sometimes we want to be a little bit more sophisticated.

Clearly highlighted interactive element using :focus on gov.uk website

The CSS :focus and :focus-visible pseudo-classes allow us to customise the look of a focus indicator. The support for :focus-visible recently landed in Safari Technology Preview 138. We can expect it to be added in an upcoming stable release and make this feature available in all modern browsers.

CSS focus vs. focus-visible

As mentioned before, browsers, by default, do a great job to determine if an element should indicate focus based on the element type, user interaction, years of feedback, testing and studying user interaction. This state is usually indicated using the outline.

Adding the :focus pseudo-class to an element will make it show a focus specific styles and disregard browsers heuristics. The :focus-visible, in contrast, applies custom styling only if it would be shown natively. It’s a win-win situation, a nice custom look and years of research in one CSS property.

A classic example is a button element. How often do you want to see a focus ring after clicking on a button? Rarely. How often do you want to see a focus indicator on a button when navigating a website using a keyboard? Almost always. There you go, :focus-visible and Bob’s your uncle!

CSS focus-visible is my new default

Am I going to replace the focus pseudo-class with focus-visible? Fuck yeah! Maybe not today but eventually for sure! With this quick write-up, I hope I helped you understand the difference between these two pseudo-classes. Until next time, stay focused (pun intended) 👊

Comments

  • L
    Laura Chan

    Would it be fair to say that all uses of :focus should be replaced with :focus-visible? Are there cases where we should use :focus over :focus-visible?

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    • Pawel Grzybek
      Pawel Grzybek

      I am not 100% sure if this is correct, but this is what I do. I personally can't think of a situation where :focus does a better job than :focus-visible 🤷‍♂️

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