# postcss-media-query-parser [![NPM version](http://img.shields.io/npm/v/postcss-media-query-parser.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/postcss-media-query-parser) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/dryoma/postcss-media-query-parser.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/dryoma/postcss-media-query-parser) Media query parser with very simple traversing functionality. ## Installation and usage First install it via NPM: ``` npm install postcss-media-query-parser ``` Then in your Node.js application: ```js import mediaParser from "postcss-media-query-parser"; const mediaQueryString = "(max-width: 100px), not print"; const result = mediaParser(mediaQueryString); ``` The `result` will be this object: ```js { type: 'media-query-list', value: '(max-width: 100px), not print', after: '', before: '', sourceIndex: 0, // the first media query nodes: [{ type: 'media-query', value: '(max-width: 100px)', before: '', after: '', sourceIndex: 0, parent: , nodes: [{ type: 'media-feature-expression', value: '(max-width: 100px)', before: '', after: '', sourceIndex: 0, parent: , nodes: [{ type: 'media-feature', value: 'max-width', before: '', after: '', sourceIndex: 1, parent: , }, { type: 'colon', value: ':', before: '', after: ' ', sourceIndex: 10, parent: , }, { type: 'value', value: '100px', before: ' ', after: '', sourceIndex: 12, parent: , }] }] }, // the second media query { type: 'media-query', value: 'not print', before: ' ', after: '', sourceIndex: 20, parent: , nodes: [{ type: 'keyword', value: 'not', before: ' ', after: ' ', sourceIndex: 20, parent: , }, { type: 'media-type', value: 'print', before: ' ', after: '', sourceIndex: 24, parent: , }] }] } ``` One of the likely sources of a string to parse would be traversing [a PostCSS container node](http://api.postcss.org/Root.html) and getting the `params` property of nodes with the name of "atRule": ```js import postcss from "postcss"; import mediaParser from "postcss-media-query-parser"; const root = postcss.parse(); // ... or any other way to get sucn container root.walkAtRules("media", (atRule) => { const mediaParsed = mediaParser(atRule.params); // Do something with "mediaParsed" object }); ``` ## Nodes Node is a very generic item in terms of this parser. It's is pretty much everything that ends up in the parsed result. Each node has these properties: * `type`: the type of the node (see below); * `value`: the node's value stripped of trailing whitespaces; * `sourceIndex`: 0-based index of the node start relative to the source start (excluding trailing whitespaces); * `before`: a string that contain a whitespace between the node start and the previous node end/source start; * `after`: a string that contain a whitespace between the node end and the next node start/source end; * `parent`: a link to this node's parent node (a container). A node can have one of these types (according to [the 2012 CSS3 standard](https://www.w3.org/TR/2012/REC-css3-mediaqueries-20120619/)): * `media-query-list`: that is the root level node of the parsing result. A [container](#containers); its children can have types of `url` and `media-query`. * `url`: if a source is taken from a CSS `@import` rule, it will have a `url(...)` function call. The value of such node will be `url(http://uri-address)`, it is to be parsed separately. * `media-query`: such nodes correspond to each media query in a comma separated list. In the exapmle above there are two. Nodes of this type are [containers](#containers). * `media-type`: `screen`, `tv` and other media types. * `keyword`: `only`, `not` or `and` keyword. * `media-feature-expression`: an expression in parentheses that checks for a condition of a particular media feature. The value would be like this: `(max-width: 1000px)`. Such nodes are [containers](#containers). They always have a `media-feature` child node, but might not have a `value` child node (like in `screen and (color)`). * `media-feature`: a media feature, e.g. `max-width`. * `colon`: present if a media feature expression has a colon (e.g. `(min-width: 1000px)`, compared to `(color)`). * `value`: a media feature expression value, e.g. `100px` in `(max-width: 1000px)`. ### Parsing details postcss-media-query-parser allows for cases of some **non-standard syntaxes** and tries its best to work them around. For example, in a media query from a code with SCSS syntax: ```scss @media #{$media-type} and ( #{"max-width" + ": 10px"} ) { ... } ``` `#{$media-type}` will be the node of type `media-type`, alghough `$media-type`'s value can be `only screen`. And inside `media-feature-expression` there will only be a `media-feature` type node with the value of `#{"max-width" + ": 10px"}` (this example doesn't make much sense, it's for demo purpose). But the result of parsing **malformed media queries** (such as with incorrect amount of closing parens, curly braces, etc.) can be unexpected. For exapmle, parsing: ```scss @media ((min-width: -100px) ``` would return a media query list with the single `media-query` node that has no child nodes. ## Containers Containers are [nodes](#nodes) that have other nodes as children. Container nodes have an additional property `nodes` which is an array of their child nodes. And also these methods: * `each(callback)` - traverses the direct child nodes of a container, calling `callback` function for each of them. Returns `false` if traversing has stopped by means of `callback` returning `false`, and `true` otherwise. * `walk([filter, ]callback)` - traverses ALL descendant nodes of a container, calling `callback` function for each of them. Returns `false` if traversing has stopped by means of `callback` returning `false`, and `true` otherwise. In both cases `callback` takes these parameters: - `node` - the current node (one of the container's descendats, that the callback has been called against). - `i` - 0-based index of the `node` in an array of its parent's children. - `nodes` - array of child nodes of `node`'s parent. If `callback` returns `false`, the traversing stops. ## License MIT