Sykje yn Support

Mij stipescams. Wy sille jo nea freegje in telefoannûmer te beljen, der in sms nei ta te stjoeren of persoanlike gegevens te dielen. Meld fertochte aktiviteit mei de opsje ‘Misbrûk melde’.

Learn More

::before and ::after pseudo-elements override my safety css. How can I override them back?

  • 4 antwurd
  • 0 hawwe dit probleem
  • 54 werjeftes
  • Lêste antwurd fan cor-el

more options

Animation triggers my migraines.

Man websites use transition and animation timing functions such as "ease in-out" to animate the interface. I try to block this. Among other tools I use userContent,css, including the following:

  • {animation-timing-function: step-start !important}
  • {transition-timing-function: step-start !important}

This works to de-animate regular css elements, but not ::before and ::after pseudo-elements.

The current css standards do not apply user css to pseudo-elements. I've written to the WCAG about the issue.

https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1865572

https://github.com/w3c/wcag3/issues/40

But I really really need some way to de-animate these, because they trigger my migraines. Aside from css fixes, I often reduce the frame rate in about:config, but can't always do that, disable smooth scrolling, disable animated gifs and animated pngs, disable autoplay, block various non-scrolling elements using either css or uBlock Origin, etc.

Animation triggers my migraines. Man websites use transition and animation timing functions such as "ease in-out" to animate the interface. I try to block this. Among other tools I use userContent,css, including the following: *{animation-timing-function: step-start !important} *{transition-timing-function: step-start !important} This works to de-animate regular css elements, but not ::before and ::after pseudo-elements. The current css standards do not apply user css to pseudo-elements. I've written to the WCAG about the issue. https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1865572 https://github.com/w3c/wcag3/issues/40 But I really really need some way to de-animate these, because they trigger my migraines. Aside from css fixes, I often reduce the frame rate in about:config, but can't always do that, disable smooth scrolling, disable animated gifs and animated pngs, disable autoplay, block various non-scrolling elements using either css or uBlock Origin, etc.

Keazen oplossing

::after and ::before are global selectors, they only apply to specific pseudo-elements like which are mentioned in the MDN article.

*, ::before, ::after {animation-timing-function: step-start !important}
*, ::before, ::after {transition-timing-function: step-start !important}
Dit antwurd yn kontekst lêze 👍 0

Alle antwurden (4)

more options

Did you try a selector like ::after and ::before ?

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/CSS_selectors

Behelpsum?

more options

The bug you linked mentions you can use the ::after and ::before selectors for targeting pseudo-elements which works for me.

Behelpsum?

more options

Uh, no.

I'm using global css, not domain-specific or element-specific css, because I need to de-animate *every* transition without having to diagnose and code for each website, with migraines from the still-animated transitions.

I'm not a programmer, and I can't read most of the online css manuals, so I may have missed something.

Behelpsum?

more options

Keazen oplossing

::after and ::before are global selectors, they only apply to specific pseudo-elements like which are mentioned in the MDN article.

*, ::before, ::after {animation-timing-function: step-start !important}
*, ::before, ::after {transition-timing-function: step-start !important}

Bewurke troch cor-el op

Behelpsum?

In fraach stelle

Jo moatte jo oanmelde by jo account om op berjochten te antwurdzjen. Stel in nije fraach as jo noch gjin account hawwe.