Consider the following scenario:
document.body.style.setProperty("--text", "world")
body::before{
--text: "Hello";
content: var(--text, "...");
}
body::after{
content: var(--text, "...");
}
CSS is able to set a type to the variable by having the value of the custom property --text
with quotes, but when done the same with javascript setProperty
this is the outcome of the (inspected) node (in Chrome) which is without quotes, which makes it impossible to use as content
value of a pseudo-element:
Can this somehow be done via JS using setProperty
? (assuming the element already has a bunch of stuff in its style
attribute which I don't want to mess with.
document.body.style.setProperty("--text", "'world'")
var word = "world";
document.body.style.setProperty("--text", word)
body::before{
--text: "Hello";
content: var(--text, "...");
}
body::after{
content: var(--text, "...");
}
document.body.style.setProperty("--text", JSON.stringify(word))