CSS nesting and specificity
The specificity of the & nesting selector is calculated using the largest specificity in the associated selector list. This is identical to how specificity is calculated when using the :is() function.
html
<b class="foo">
<i>Blue text</i>
</b>
& nesting syntax
css
#a, b {
& i {
color: blue;
}
}
.foo i {
color: red;
}
:is() syntax
css
:is(#a, b) {
& i {
color: blue;
}
}
.foo i {
color: red;
}
In this example, the id selector (#a) has a specificity of 1-0-0, while the type selector (b) has a specificity of 0-0-1. The & nesting selector and :is() pseudo-class both take a specificity of 1-0-0, even though the #a id selector is never used.
The .foo class selector has a specificity of 0-1-0. This makes the total specificity 1-0-1 for & i and 0-1-1 for .foo i, meaning that color: blue; wins out.