You can use :valid and :invalid selectors. Something like this
.field:valid {
border-color:#0f0;
}
.field:invalid {
border-color:#f00;
}
However, this will only work in browsers that support native validation, and only for fields that make sense. As far as I know, right now that only means Chrome (maybe Safari, but haven't checked).
So by native validation I mean that in chrome if you do <input type="email">
the field's value will be validated for email type string (without any additional javascript), so the styles above will work. However, if you were to attach them to a type="text"
field, or a second password field (that is suppose to match the first), you'd only ever get green because everything is valid, and in the case of password, there's no "type" for that anyway.
Which basically means that to support all browsers, and more importantly, wider array of validations you still have to resort to javascript, in which case assigning .valid/.invalid class shouldn't be a problem. :)
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…