:out-of-range
Baseline Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since November 2015.
The :out-of-range
CSS pseudo-class represents an <input>
element whose current value is outside the range limits specified by the min
and max
attributes.
Try it
label { display: block; margin-top: 1em; } input:out-of-range { background-color: orangered; }
<form> <label for="amount">How many tickets? (You can buy 2-6 tickets)</label> <input id="amount" name="amount" type="number" min="2" max="6" value="4" /> <label for="dep">Departure Date: (Whole year 2022 is acceptable)</label> <input id="dep" name="dep" type="date" min="2022-01-01" max="2022-12-31" value="2025-05-05" /> <label for="ret">Return Date: (Whole year 2022 is acceptable)</label> <input id="ret" name="ret" type="date" min="2022-01-01" max="2022-12-31" /> </form>
This pseudo-class is useful for giving the user a visual indication that a field's current value is outside the permitted limits.
Note: This pseudo-class only applies to elements that have (and can take) a range limitation. In the absence of such a limitation, the element can neither be "in-range" nor "out-of-range."
Syntax
css
:out-of-range { /* ... */ }
Examples
HTML
html
<form action="" id="form1"> <p>Values between 1 and 10 are valid.</p> <ul> <li> <input id="value1" name="value1" type="number" placeholder="1 to 10" min="1" max="10" value="12" /> <label for="value1">Your value is </label> </li> </ul> </form>
CSS
css
li { list-style: none; margin-bottom: 1em; } input { border: 1px solid black; } input:in-range { background-color: rgb(0 255 0 / 25%); } input:out-of-range { background-color: rgb(255 0 0 / 25%); border: 2px solid red; } input:in-range + label::after { content: "okay."; } input:out-of-range + label::after { content: "out of range!"; }
Result
Specifications
Specification |
---|
HTML # selector-out-of-range |
Selectors Level 4 # out-of-range-pseudo |