CSS nesting at-rules

Any at-rule whose body contains style rules can be nested inside another style rule using CSS nesting. Style rules nested inside at-rules take their nesting selector definition from the nearest ancestor style rule. Properties can be directly included inside a nested at-rule, acting as if they were nested in a & {...} block.

at-rules that can be nested

Examples

Nesting @media at-rule

In this example we see three blocks of CSS. The first one shows how to write typical at-rule nesting, the second is an expanded way of writing the nesting as the browser parses it, and the third one shows the non-nested equivalent.

Nested CSS

css
.foo {
  display: grid;
  @media (orientation: landscape) {
    grid-auto-flow: column;
  }
}

Expanded nested CSS

css
.foo {
  display: grid;
  @media (orientation: landscape) {
    & {
      grid-auto-flow: column;
    }
  }
}

Non-nested equivalent

css
.foo {
  display: grid;
}

@media (orientation: landscape) {
  .foo {
    grid-auto-flow: column;
  }
}

Multiple nested @media at-rules

At-rules can be nested within other at-rules. Below you can see an example of this, and how it would be written without nesting.

Nested at-rules

css
.foo {
  display: grid;
  @media (orientation: landscape) {
    grid-auto-flow: column;
    @media (min-width: 1024px) {
      max-inline-size: 1024px;
    }
  }
}

Non-nested equivalent

css
.foo {
  display: grid;
}
@media (orientation: landscape) {
  .foo {
    grid-auto-flow: column;
  }
}
@media (orientation: landscape) and (min-width: 1024px) {
  .foo {
    max-inline-size: 1024px;
  }
}

Nesting Cascade Layers (@layer)

Cascade Layers can be nested to create child-layers. These are joined with a . (dot).

Defining the parent & child layers

We start by defining the named cascade layers, prior to using them, without any style assignments.

css
@layer base {
  @layer support;
}

Assigning rules to layers with nesting

Here the .foo selector assigns its rules to the base @layer. The nested support @layer creates the base.support sub-layer, and the & nesting selector is used to create the rules for the .foo .bar selector .

css
.foo {
  @layer base {
    block-size: 100%;
    @layer support {
      & .bar {
        min-block-size: 100%;
      }
    }
  }
}

Equivalent without nesting

css
@layer base {
  .foo {
    block-size: 100%;
  }
}
@layer base.support {
  .foo .bar {
    min-block-size: 100%;
  }
}

See also