Philipp Partosch 46a936d7de added all files to project | 2 years ago | |
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dist | 2 years ago | |
CHANGELOG.md | 2 years ago | |
README.md | 2 years ago | |
package.json | 2 years ago |
Media query parser with very simple traversing functionality.
First install it via NPM:
npm install postcss-media-query-parser
Then in your Node.js application:
import mediaParser from "postcss-media-query-parser";
const mediaQueryString = "(max-width: 100px), not print";
const result = mediaParser(mediaQueryString);
The result
will be this object:
{
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: <link to parent 'media-query-list' node>,
nodes: [{
type: 'media-feature-expression',
value: '(max-width: 100px)',
before: '',
after: '',
sourceIndex: 0,
parent: <link to parent 'media-query' node>,
nodes: [{
type: 'media-feature',
value: 'max-width',
before: '',
after: '',
sourceIndex: 1,
parent: <link to parent 'media-feature-expression' node>,
}, {
type: 'colon',
value: ':',
before: '',
after: ' ',
sourceIndex: 10,
parent: <link to parent 'media-feature-expression' node>,
}, {
type: 'value',
value: '100px',
before: ' ',
after: '',
sourceIndex: 12,
parent: <link to parent 'media-feature-expression' node>,
}]
}]
},
// the second media query
{
type: 'media-query',
value: 'not print',
before: ' ',
after: '',
sourceIndex: 20,
parent: <link to parent 'media-query-list' node>,
nodes: [{
type: 'keyword',
value: 'not',
before: ' ',
after: ' ',
sourceIndex: 20,
parent: <link to parent 'media-query' node>,
}, {
type: 'media-type',
value: 'print',
before: ' ',
after: '',
sourceIndex: 24,
parent: <link to parent 'media-query' node>,
}]
}]
}
One of the likely sources of a string to parse would be traversing a PostCSS container node and getting the params
property of nodes with the name of “atRule”:
import postcss from "postcss";
import mediaParser from "postcss-media-query-parser";
const root = postcss.parse(<contents>);
// ... or any other way to get sucn container
root.walkAtRules("media", (atRule) => {
const mediaParsed = mediaParser(atRule.params);
// Do something with "mediaParsed" object
});
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):
media-query-list
: that is the root level node of the parsing result. A container; 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.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. 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)
.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:
@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:
@media ((min-width: -100px)
would return a media query list with the single media-query
node that has no child nodes.
Containers are 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.
MIT