This operator is used in CSS Modules. Modular CSS uses a CSS Modules compiler to scope CSS styles within their respective modules (e.g., React component).
Here’s an example from a React module (in the file ErrorMessaging.less for the ErrorMessaging.jsx React component):
:global(.ocssContainer) {
.ui_column {
padding-left: 0;
}
}
This gets compiled into:
.ErrorMessaging__alertContainer--1I-Cz .ocssContainer .ErrorMessaging__ui_column--3uMUS {
padding-left: 0;
}
But now I add a :global modifier onto .ui_column:
:global(.ocssContainer) {
:global(.ui_column) {
padding-left: 0;
}
}
And this is what it compiles to:
.ErrorMessaging__alertContainer--1I-Cz .ocssContainer .ui_column {
padding-left: 0;
}
Now .ui_column can apply to any child element with that style, including in a child React component, and not just .ui_column elements that are part of the ErrorMessaging React component.