diff --git a/selectors-4/deferred-for-level-5 b/selectors-5/Overview.bs
similarity index 60%
rename from selectors-4/deferred-for-level-5
rename to selectors-5/Overview.bs
index f53012644a7..70a9d4ed6f5 100644
--- a/selectors-4/deferred-for-level-5
+++ b/selectors-5/Overview.bs
@@ -1,40 +1,42 @@
-
-Reference combinators /ref/
-
- The reference combinator consists of two slashes
- with an intervening CSS qualified name,
- and separates two compound selectors,
- e.g. ''A /attr/ B''.
- The element represented by the first compound selector
- explicitly references
- the element represented by the second compound selector.
- Unless the host language defines a different syntax for expressing this relationship,
- this relationship is considered to exist if
- the value of the specified attribute on the first element is an IDREF or an ID selector
- referencing the second element.
-
- Attribute matching for reference combinators follow the same rules as for attribute selectors.
-
-
- The following example highlights an
input element
- when its
<label>
- is focused or hovered-over:
-
-
- label:is(:hover, :focus) /for/ input, /* association by "for" attribute */
- label:is(:hover, :focus):not([for]) input { /* association by containment */
- box-shadow: yellow 0 0 10px;
- }
-
-
-
-
+
+Title: Selectors Level 5
+Group: CSSWG
+Shortname: selectors
+Level: 5
+Status: ED
+Work Status: Exploring
+ED: https://drafts.csswg.org/selectors-5/
+TR: https://www.w3.org/TR/selectors-5/
+Editor: Elika J. Etemad / fantasai, Apple, http://fantasai.inkedblade.net/contact, w3cid 35400
+Editor: Tab Atkins Jr., Google, http://xanthir.com/contact/, w3cid 42199
+Abstract: Selectors are patterns that match against elements in a tree, and as such form one of several technologies that can be used to select nodes in a document. Selectors have been optimized for use with HTML and XML, and are designed to be usable in performance-critical code. They are a core component of CSS (Cascading Style Sheets), which uses Selectors to bind style properties to elements in the document.
+Abstract: Selectors Level 5 describes the selectors that already exist in [[!selectors-4]], and further introduces new selectors for CSS and other languages that may need them.
+
+
+spec:selectors-4; type:dfn; text:selector
+
+
+
+Introduction
+
+ ISSUE: This is a diff spec against
+ Selectors Level 4.
+
+
+Module Interactions
+
+ This module extends
+ the set of selectors defined for CSS in [[selectors-4]].
+
+
+Location Pseudo-classes
The local link pseudo-class '':local-link''
The :local-link pseudo-class allows authors to style
- hyperlinks based on the users current location within a site and to
+ [[selectors-4#the-any-link-pseudo|hyperlinks]]
+ based on the users current location within a site and to
differentiate site-internal versus site-external links.
The (non-functional) '':local-link'' pseudo-class represents an element that is
@@ -115,7 +117,7 @@ The local link pseudo-class '':local-link''
The "origin" of the URL is defined by RFC 6454, Section 4.
The username, password, query string, and fragment portions of the URL are not considered
- when matching against '':local-link(n)''.
+ when matching against '':local-link(n)''.
If the document's URL does not belong to a hierarchical scheme,
the functional pseudo-class matches nothing.
@@ -128,13 +130,86 @@ The local link pseudo-class '':local-link''
and the link is same-page?
Should "null segments" count as matching, or not?
-Exposing custom state: the '':state()'' pseudo-class
+
+Exposing custom state: the '':state()'' pseudo-class
+
+ The :state() pseudo-class takes a case-sensitive argument
+ and matches custom elements whose exposed custom states include the argument.
+
+ The grammar of the '':state()'' pseudo-class is:
+
+ :state( )
+
+ The exact matching behavior of '':state()'' pseudo-class
+ is defined by the host language.
+ See HTML's definition.
+
+
+Combinators
+
+
+Reference combinators /ref/
+
+ The reference combinator consists of two slashes
+ with an intervening CSS qualified name,
+ and separates two compound selectors,
+ e.g. ''A /attr/ B''.
+ The element represented by the first compound selector
+ explicitly references
+ the element represented by the second compound selector.
+ Unless the host language defines a different syntax for expressing this relationship,
+ this relationship is considered to exist if
+ the value of the specified attribute on the first element is an IDREF or an ID selector
+ referencing the second element.
+
+ Attribute matching for reference combinators follow the same rules as for attribute selectors.
+
+
+ The following example highlights an
input element
+ when its
<label>
+ is focused or hovered-over:
+
+
+ label:is(:hover, :focus) /for/ input, /* association by "for" attribute */
+ label:is(:hover, :focus):not([for]) input { /* association by containment */
+ box-shadow: yellow 0 0 10px;
+ }
+
+
+
+
+
+Changes
+
+
+Changes Since Level 4
+
+ Additions since Level 4:
+
+
+ - Reference combinators
+ (deferred from an earlier draft of Selectors 4)
+ - The functional form of the '':local-link'' pseudo-class
+ (deferred from an earlier draft of Selectors 4)
+ - The '':state()'' pseudo-class
+
+
+
+Acknowledgements
+
+ The CSS working group would like to thank everyone who contributed
+ to the previous Selectors specifications over the years,
+ as those specifications formed the basis for this one.
+ In particular, the working group would like to extend special thanks
+ to the following for their specific contributions to Selectors Level 5:
+ Joey Arhar.
+
+ Privacy Considerations
+
+ Should be copied from Level 4 when appropriate.
- The :state() pseudo-class takes a case-sensitive argument
- and matches custom elements whose exposed custom states include the argument.
+ Security Considerations
- The grammar of the '':state()'' pseudo-class is:
+ Should be copied from Level 4 when appropriate.
- :state( )
- The exact matching behavior of '':state()'' pseudo-class is defined by the host language. See HTML's definition.