Package Exports
- stylis
- stylis/stylis.js
- stylis/stylis.min
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (stylis) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
STYLIS
stylis is a feature-rich css preprocessor
- ~3Kb
Supports
- Edge
- IE 8+
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- Node
Installation
direct download
<script src=stylis.min.js></script>CDN
<script src=https://unpkg.com/stylis@1.1.8/stylis.min.js></script>npm
npm install stylis --saveFeatures
- variables via
~~fooandvar(~~foo)similar to css variables--fooandvar(--foo) - web component emulation of
:host,:host()and:host-context() - namespacing
- inline global injection via
:global(selector) - block level global injection via
@global {} - nesting
a { &:hover {} } - static and function mixins via
@mixin ...and@include - prefixer (flex-box, etc...)
- flat css
color: red; h1 { color: red; } - middleware support
- keyframes and animation namespacing
stylis is a feature-rich css preprocessor that turns this
stylis('#user', styles);Where styles is the following css
// variables
~~foo: 20px;
// flat css
font-size: 2em;
font-family: sans-serif;
width: var(~~foo);
// emulation for shadow dom selectors
:host {
color: red;
}
:host(.fancy) {
color: red;
}
:host-context(body) {
color: red;
}
// removes line comment
.name {
transform: rotate(30deg);
}
// inject to global scope block
@global {
body {
background: yellow;
}
}
// inject to global scope inline
span, h1, :global(h2) {
color:red;
/**
* removes block comments
*/
}
// prefixing
& {
animation: slidein 3s ease infinite;
display: flex;
flex: 1;
user-select: none;
}
// namespaced animations
&:before {
animation: slidein 3s ease infinite;
}
// namespaced keyframes
@keyframes slidein {
from { transform: translate(10px); }
to { transform: translate(200px); }
}
// flat namespaced css in @media
@media (max-width: 600px) {
display: block;
&, h1 {
appearance: none;
}
}
// nesting
h1 {
color: red;
h2 {
display: block;
h3, &:hover {
color: blue;
}
}
font-size: 12px;
}
// static mixins
@mixin large-text {
font-size: 20px;
}
// function mixins
@mixin linx (link, visit, hover, active) {
a {
color: var(~~link);
&:hover {
color: var(~~hover);
}
}
}
// use static mixins
& {
@include large-text;
}
// use function mixins
@include linx(white, blue, green, red);into this (minus the whitespace)
#user {
font-size: 2em;
font-family: sans-serif;
width: 20px;
}
#user {
color: red;
}
#user.fancy {
color: red;
}
body #user {
color: red;
}
#user .name {
-webkit-transform: rotate(30deg);
-ms-transform: rotate(30deg);
transform: rotate(30deg);
}
body {
background: yellow;
}
#user span,
#user h1,
h2 {
color: red;
}
#user {
display: -webkit-flex;
display: flex;
-webkit-flex: 1;
-moz-flex: 1;
flex: 1;
-webkit-user-select: none;
-moz-user-select: none;
-ms-user-select: none;
user-select: none;
-webkit-animation: userslidein 3s ease infinite;
animation: userslidein 3s ease infinite;
}
#user:before {
-webkit-animation: userslidein 3s ease infinite;
animation: userslidein 3s ease infinite;
}
@-webkit-keyframes userslidein {
from {
-webkit-transform: translate(10px);
-ms-transform: translate(10px);
transform: translate(10px);
}
to {
-webkit-transform: translate(200px);
-ms-transform: translate(200px);
transform: translate(200px);
}
}
@keyframes userslidein {
from {
-webkit-transform: translate(10px);
-ms-transform: translate(10px);
transform: translate(10px);
}
to {
-webkit-transform: translate(200px);
-ms-transform: translate(200px);
transform: translate(200px);
}
}
@media (max-width: 600px) {
#user, #user h1 {
-webkit-appearance: none;
-moz-appearance: none;
appearance: none;
}
#user {
display: block;
}
}
#user h1 {
color: red;
font-size: 12px;
}
#user h1 h2 {
display: block;
}
#user h1 h2 h3,
#user h1 h2 h2:hover {
color: blue;
}
#user {
font-size: 20px;
}
#user a {
color: white;
&:hover {
color: green;
}
}API
stylis(
selector: {string}, // selector - i.e `.class` or `#id` or `[attr=id]`
styles: {string}, // css string
animations: {boolean=} // false to prevent prefixing animations, true by default
compact: {boolean=} // enable additional features (mixins, variables)
middleware: {function=}
);
stylis.use(
key/middleware: {(string|RegExp|function|array|object)}
plugin: {function=}
)Middleware
The optional middleware function accepts four arguments ctx, str, line, column, namespace, the middleware is executed at 4 stages.
- before the compiler starts
ctx = 0, you can use this to do any linting/transforms before compiling - at every selector declaration pre-processed
ctx = 1i.e.class/.foo, .bar - at every selector post-processed
ctx = 1.5i.e.prefix.foo - at every property declaration
ctx = 2i.ecolor: red; - before a block of compiled css is added to the output string
ctx = 3, i.e.class {color:red;} - before a block of flat compiled css is added to the output string
ctx = 4, i.ecolor:blue; - When an
importstatement is foundctx = 5, i.eimport 'foo' - before the compiled css output is returned
ctx = 6
If you wanted to you could parse import statements in the middleware and return the imported file, stylis will then insert the content of it into the css that it later parse/compile. The str value on import context is the file name i.e foo or foo.scss or multiple files foo, bar.
If at any context point the middleware returns a non-falsey value the token or block of css will be replaced with the return value. For example we can add a feature random() that when used prints a random number.
stylis(``, `h1 { width: calc(random()*10); }`, false, function (ctx, str, line, column, namespace) {
switch (ctx) {
// 2: property declaration, str will be `width: calc(random()*10);`
case 2: return str.replace(/random\(\)/g, Math.random());
}
});Will replace all instances of random() with a random number.
Extending css syntax with function
As you can tell from the above middleware it is possible to extend css's syntax. In the previous example we used a function as middleware which allows for much lower level access and control but we could as well use an object of functions that define what different function in the css will generate. For example a random() and darken(value) extension can look like
stylis(``, `
h1 {
width: calc(random()*10);
color: darken(#FFF);
}
`, false, {
random () {
return Math.random();
}
darken (value) {
return '#000';
}
});If we had used darken(#FFF, #CCC) in our css the two arguments would have been passed to the darken function.
The same can be done with stylis.use to register middleware individually, and stylis.plugins.length = 0 to flush all middleware.
Intergration
You can use stylis to build an abstraction ontop of, for example imagine we want to build an abstract that makes the following React Component possible
class Heading extends React.Component {
stylesheet(){
return `
&{
color: blue
}
`;
}
render() {
return (
React.createElement('h1', 'Hello World')
);
}
}We could simply extend the Component class as follows
React.Component.prototype.stylis = function (self) {
var namespace = this.displayName;
return function () {
stylis(namespace, self.stylesheet(), document.head);
mounted = true;
this.setAttribute(namespace);
}
}Then use it in the following way
class Heading extends React.Component {
stylesheet(){
return `
&{
color: blue
}
`;
}
render() {
return (
React.createElement('h1', {ref: this.stylis(self)}, 'Hello World')
);
}
}When the first instance of the component is mounted the function assigned to the ref will get executed adding a style element with the compiled output of stylesheet()
where as only the namespace attribute is added to any subsequent instances.
You can of course do this another way
class Heading extends React.Component {
constructor (props) {
super(props);
// or you can even inline this
this.style = React.createElement('style', {id: this.displayName}, this.stylesheet());
}
stylesheet(){
return `
&{
color: blue
}
`;
}
render() {
return (
React.createElement('h1', null, 'Hello World', this.style)
);
}
}One will add it to the head another will render it in place with the component.
If you want a better picture into what can be done, there is an abstraction i created for dio.js that does away with the above boilerplate entirely http://jsbin.com/mozefe/1/edit?js,output