Case-insensitive CSS attribute selectors

- WD

Including an i before the ] in a CSS attribute selector causes the attribute value to be matched in an ASCII-case-insensitive manner. For example, [b="xyz" i] would match both <a b="xyz"> and <a b="XYZ">.

Chrome

  1. 4 - 48: Not supported
  2. 49 - 130: Supported
  3. 131: Supported
  4. 132 - 134: Supported

Edge

  1. 12 - 18: Not supported
  2. 79 - 130: Supported
  3. 131: Supported

Safari

  1. 3.1 - 8: Not supported
  2. 9 - 18.0: Supported
  3. 18.1: Supported
  4. 18.2 - TP: Supported

Firefox

  1. 2 - 46: Not supported
  2. 47 - 131: Supported
  3. 132: Supported
  4. 133 - 135: Supported

Opera

  1. 9 - 35: Not supported
  2. 36 - 113: Supported
  3. 114: Supported

IE

  1. 5.5 - 10: Not supported
  2. 11: Not supported

Chrome for Android

  1. 131: Supported

Safari on iOS

  1. 3.2 - 8.4: Not supported
  2. 9 - 18.0: Supported
  3. 18.1: Supported
  4. 18.2: Supported

Samsung Internet

  1. 4: Not supported
  2. 5 - 25: Supported
  3. 26: Supported

Opera Mini

  1. all: Not supported

Opera Mobile

  1. 10 - 12.1: Not supported
  2. 80: Supported

UC Browser for Android

  1. 15.5: Supported

Android Browser

  1. 2.1 - 4.4.4: Not supported
  2. 131: Supported

Firefox for Android

  1. 132: Supported

QQ Browser

  1. 14.9: Supported

Baidu Browser

  1. 13.52: Supported

KaiOS Browser

  1. 2.5: Supported
  2. 3: Supported
Resources:
MDN Web Docs - CSS case-insensitive
JS Bin testcase