sheetify

:sparkles: Modular CSS bundler for browserify

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sheetify

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js-standard-style

Modular CSS bundler for browserify. Works with npm modules
like browserify does.

Features

  • clarity: namespace CSS, no more need for naming schemes
  • modularity: import and reuse CSS packages from npm
  • extensibility: transform CSS using existing transforms, or write your own
  • transparency: inline CSS in your views
  • simplicity: tiny API surface and a minimal code base

Example

Given some inline CSS:

const css = require('sheetify')
const html = require('nanohtml')

const prefix = css`
  :host > h1 {
    text-align: center;
  }
`

const tree = html`
  <section class=${prefix}>
    <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
  </section>
`

document.body.appendChild(tree)

Compile with browserify using -t sheetify:

$ browserify -t sheetify index.js > bundle.js

CSS classes are namespaced based on the content hash:

._60ed23ec9f > h1 {
  text-align: center;
}

And the rendered HTML includes the namespace:

<section class="_60ed23ec9f">
  <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
</section>

Styling host elements

The element that gets a prefix applied can be styled using the :host
pseudoselector
:

const css = require('sheetify')
const html = require('nanohtml')

const prefix = css`
  :host {
    background-color: blue;
  }

  :host > h1 {
    text-decoration: underline;
  }
`

const tree = html`
  <section class=${prefix}>
    <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
  </section>
`

document.body.appendChild(tree)

By using :host we are able to provide styles for the parent element:

._60ed23ec9f {
  background-color: blue;
}

._60ed23ec9f > h1 {
  text-decoration: underline;
}
<section class="_60ed23ec9f">
  <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
</style>

Dynamic vs static

Sheetify is very good for namespacing static css assets in your javaScript code. Currently there is no support for dynamic variables within sheetify, however you could achieve this by setting the inline style property of an element.

const css = require('sheetify')
const html = require('nanohtml')

const sectionWidth = '100px';
const prefix = css`
  :host {
    background-color: blue;
  }

  :host > h1 {
    text-decoration: underline;
  }
`

const tree = html`
  <section class=${prefix} style="width:${sectionWidth}">
    <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
  </section>
`

document.body.appendChild(tree)

Should you want to, you could even set dynamic variables in an object and do a rather complicated JSON.stringify with a replace on that object to turn it into a style for an element.


const dynamicStyles = {
  width: global.window.innerWidth,
  height: global.window.innerHeight,
}

let dynamicStyleString = JSON.stringify(dynamicStyles)
    .replace(/\,/g,';')
    .replace(/\"/g,'')
    .replace(/\{, \}/g,'')

const tree = html`
  <div style="${dynamicStyleString}">
    <h1>My beautiful, window width</h1>
  </div>
`

External files

To include an external CSS file you can pass a path to sheetify as
sheetify('./my-file.css'):

const css = require('sheetify')
const html = require('nanohtml')

const prefix = css('./my-styles.css')

const tree = html`
  <section class=${prefix}>
    <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
  </section>
`

document.body.appendChild(tree)

Use npm packages

To consume a package from npm that has .css file in its main or style
field:

const css = require('sheetify')

css('normalize.css')

Packages from npm will not be namespaced by default.

Write to separate file on disk

To write the compiled CSS to a separate file, rather than keep it in the
bundle use css-extract:

$ browserify index.js \
  -t [ sheetify ] \
  -p [ css-extract -o bundle.css ] index.js \
  -o bundle.js

css-extract can also write to a stream from the JS api, look at the
documentation to see how.

Transforms

Sheetify uses transforms that take CSS and apply a transform.
For example include
sheetify-cssnext to support
autoprefixing, variables and more:

const css = require('sheetify')
const html = require('nanohtml')

const prefix = css`
  h1 {
    transform: translate(0, 0);
  }
`

const tree = html`
  <section class=${prefix}>
    <h1>My beautiful, centered title</h1>
  </section>
`

document.body.appendChild(tree)

Compile with browserify using -t [ sheetify -t sheetify-cssnext ]:

$ browserify -t [ sheetify -t sheetify-cssnext ] index.js > bundle.js

Transforms the CSS into:

h1 {
  -webkit-transform: translate(0, 0);
          transform: translate(0, 0);
}

API

Browserify transforms accept either flags from the command line using
subargs:

$ browserify -t [ sheetify -t sheetify-cssnext ] index.js > bundle.js

Or the equivalent options by passing in a configuration object in the
JavaScript API:

const browserify = require('browserify')

const b = browserify(path.join(__dirname, 'transform/source.js'))
b.transform('sheetify', { transform: [ 'sheetify-cssnext' ] })
b.bundle().pipe(process.stdout)

The following options are available:

Options:
  -t, --transform    Consume a sheetify transform

Installation

$ npm install sheetify

See Also

  • browserify - browser-side
    require() the node.js way
  • glslify - module system for GLSL
    shaders
  • hyperx - transform inline HTML to JS
  • bankai - DIY server middleware for
    JS, CSS and HTML
  • css-extract: extract CSS from a browserify bundle

License

MIT

Main metrics

Overview
Name With Ownerstackcss/sheetify
Primary LanguageJavaScript
Program languageJavaScript (Language Count: 2)
Platform
License:MIT License
所有者活动
Created At2014-02-11 01:02:24
Pushed At2020-09-19 11:16:28
Last Commit At2020-09-19 13:14:42
Release Count58
Last Release Namev8.0.0 (Posted on 2019-08-28 11:13:59)
First Release Namev0.1.0 (Posted on 2014-02-11 12:01:33)
用户参与
Stargazers Count447
Watchers Count12
Fork Count47
Commits Count229
Has Issues Enabled
Issues Count74
Issue Open Count17
Pull Requests Count61
Pull Requests Open Count1
Pull Requests Close Count31
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Has Wiki Enabled
Is Archived
Is Fork
Is Locked
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Is Private