I second the scenario in Gilson's merged idea where I would like to affect an element based on another (parent) element's :focus state.
"Simply" also applying a "Mouse hover" trigger to :focus and :active might suffice. However, it would surely be argued/requested that they should be dedicated element triggers.
I second the scenario in Gilson's merged idea where I would like to affect an element based on another (parent) element's :focus state.
"Simply" also applying a "Mouse hover" trigger to :focus and :active might suffice. However, it would surely be argued/requested that they should be dedicated element triggers.