@document

Deprecated: This feature is no longer recommended. Though some browsers might still support it, it may have already been removed from the relevant web standards, may be in the process of being dropped, or may only be kept for compatibility purposes. Avoid using it, and update existing code if possible; see the compatibility table at the bottom of this page to guide your decision. Be aware that this feature may cease to work at any time.

Non-standard: This feature is non-standard and is not on a standards track. Do not use it on production sites facing the Web: it will not work for every user. There may also be large incompatibilities between implementations and the behavior may change in the future.

The @document CSS at-rule restricts the style rules contained within it based on the URL of the document. It is designed primarily for user-defined style sheets, though it can be used on author-defined style sheets, too.

css
@document url("https://www.example.com/")
{
  h1 {
    color: green;
  }
}

Syntax

An @document rule can specify one or more matching functions. If any of the functions apply to a given URL, the rule will take effect on that URL. The functions available are:

url()

Matches an exact URL.

url-prefix()

Matches if the document URL starts with the value provided.

domain()

Matches if the document URL is on the domain provided (or a subdomain of it).

media-document()

Matches the media according to the string in parameter, one of video, image, plugin or all.

regexp() Deprecated Non-standard

Matches if the document URL is matched by the regular expression provided. The expression must match the entire URL.

The values provided to the url(), url-prefix(), domain(), and media-document() functions can be optionally enclosed by single or double quotes. The values provided to the regexp() function must be enclosed in quotes.

Escaped values provided to the regexp() function must additionally be escaped from the CSS. For example, a . (period) matches any character in regular expressions. To match a literal period, you would first need to escape it using regular expression rules (to \.), then escape that string using CSS rules (to \\.).

@document is currently only supported in Firefox; if you wanted to replicate using such functionality in your own non-Firefox browser, you could try using this polyfill by @An-Error94, which uses a combination of a user script, data-* attributes, and attribute selectors.

Note: There is a -moz-prefixed version of this property — @-moz-document. This has been limited to use only in user and UA sheets in Firefox 59 in Nightly and Beta — an experiment designed to mitigate potential CSS injection attacks (See Firefox bug 1035091).

Formal syntax

@document [ <url>                    |
            url-prefix(<string>)     |
            domain(<string>)         |
            media-document(<string>) |
            regexp(<string>)
          ]# {
  <group-rule-body>
}

Examples

Specifying document for CSS rule

css
@document url("http://www.w3.org/"),
          url-prefix("http://www.w3.org/Style/"),
          domain("mozilla.org"),
          media-document("video"),
          regexp("https:.*") {
  /* CSS rules here apply to:
     - The page "http://www.w3.org/"
     - Any page whose URL begins with "http://www.w3.org/Style/"
     - Any page whose URL's host is "mozilla.org"
       or ends with ".mozilla.org"
     - Any standalone video
     - Any page whose URL starts with "https:" */

  /* Make the above-mentioned pages really ugly */
  body {
    color: purple;
    background: yellow;
  }
}

Specifications

Initially in Level 3, @document was postponed to Level 4, but then subsequently removed.

Browser compatibility

BCD tables only load in the browser

See also