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Home/ Questions/Q 3307844
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T21:27:11+00:00 2026-05-17T21:27:11+00:00

According to new article from css-tricks there is a big difference between how you

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According to new article from css-tricks there is a big difference between how you select your elements because they are selected from right to left.

The article can be found here.
http://css-tricks.com/efficiently-rendering-css/

I am about to create a page that have different documents on the same page:

My question is, how should i go about the HTML for CSS efficiency or vise versa?

<div class="document-type-1">
    <h1>Some heading</h1>
    <p>Some paragraph</p>
</div>

<div class="document-type-2">
    <h1>Some heading</h1>
    <p>Some paragraph</p>
</div>

There can be multiple of the same document type, i can therefore not use an ID.

.document-type-1 h1 {

}

.document-type-1 p {

}

.document-type-2 h1 {

}

.document-type-2 p {

}

This will be “inefficient” since all p tags are found first…

How would you go about it if this should be done faster and you should be able to move the same article to a new document type?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T21:27:12+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 9:27 pm

    As far as I can see, if I understand the article correctly, the most efficient way to do this – if you don’t use a custom ID for each element – would be:

    // YUCK!
    
    <div class="document-type-1">
        <h1 class="document-type-1-h1">Some heading</h1>
        <p class="document-type-1-p">Some paragraph</p>
    </div>
    
    .document-type-1-h1 {
    
    }
    
    .document-type-1-p {
    
    }
    

    But this is disgusting. It is a dilemma that writing perfectly efficient CSS goes against all rules of writing good CSS.

    Unless there are real, actual rendering speed problems caused by CSS rules, I would tend to obey some common-sense rules (e.g. not being wasteful with global selectors > * style, not using “overly qualified selectors” like form#UserLogin {...}, not using too many rules in general….), but otherwise focus on clean, well structured CSS. As the article itself states:

    I think the lesson here is not to sacrifice semantics or maintainability for efficient CSS.

    The Google Page Speed tips linked to by @gulbrandr in his answer give some good real-world advice.

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