Gonzales PE is a CSS parser which plays nicely with preprocessors.
Currently those are supported: SCSS, Sass, LESS.
Try out Gonzales PE online: Gonzales PE Playground.
(1) To install command-line tool globally:
npm install -g git://github.com/tonyganch/gonzales-pe.git#dev
(2) To install parser as a project dependency:
npm install --save git://github.com/tonyganch/gonzales-pe.git#dev
(3) If for some reason you want to build files yourself:
# Clone the repo.
git clone [email protected]:tonyganch/gonzales-pe.git
# Go to dev branch.
git checkout dev
# Install project dependencies.
npm install
# Install git hooks and build files.
npm run init
Basically there are a few things you can do:
- parse css string and get a parse tree in return;
- modify tree nodes;
- remove tree nodes;
- add new nodes to the tree;
- convert modified tree back to a string.
The different type of tree nodes can be found in docs/node-types.md.
In examples below I assume that gonzales
is a parser module and parseTree
is some parsed css:
let gonzales = require('gonzales-pe');
let parseTree = gonzales.parse(css);
Creates a new node. Useful when you need to add something to a tree.
{Object} | options | Options to pass to a `Node` constructor. |
{Object} | A new node. |
let css = 'a {color: tomato}';
let parseTree = gonzales.parse(css);
let node = gonzales.createNode({ type: 'animal', content: 'panda' });
parseTree.content.push(node);
Parses a css string.
{string} | css | A string to parse. |
{Object=} | options | Optional. Additional options:
|
{Object} | Parse tree. |
let css = 'a {color: tomato}';
let parseTree = gonzales.parse(css);
let less = 'a {$color: tomato}';
let parseTree = gonzales.parse(less, {syntax: 'less'});
let less = '$color: tomato';
let parseTree = gonzales.parse(less, {syntax: 'less', rule: 'declaration'});
Checks whether there is a child node of given type.
{string} | type | Node type we're looking for. For a list of available values see "Node types". |
{boolean} |
true if a tree contains a child node of a given type,
false otherwise.
|
if (parseTree.contains('space')) {
doSomething();
}
{string|Array} | Node's content (child nodes or a string). |
Calls a function for every child node in tree. If type
parameter is passed,
calls a function only for child nodes of a given type. The main difference from
parseTree.forEach()
is that this method loops through node list from the end
to beginning.
{string=} | type | Optional. A node type by which to filter child nodes before applying a callback function. For a list of available values see "Node types". |
{Function} | callback |
Function to call for every child node. Accepts following parameters:
|
parseTree.eachFor(function(childNode) {
doSomething(childNode);
});
// Remove all child spaces.
parseTree.eachFor('space', function(spaceNode, i) {
parseTree.removeChild(i);
});
{Object} |
End position of the node. Contains following info:
|
Gets the first child node. If type
parameter is passed, gets the first child
node of a given type. If no node has been found, returns null
.
{string=} | type | Optional. Node type to look for. For a list of available values see "Node types". |
{?Object} | A node. |
let node = parseTree.first();
node.content = 'panda';
let node = parseTree.first('multilineComment');
node.content = 'panda';
Calls a function for every child node in tree. If type
parameter is passed,
calls a function only for child nodes of a given type. The main difference from
parseTree.eachFor()
is that this method loops through node list from the
beginnig to end.
{string=} | type | Optional. A node type by which to filter child nodes before applying a callback function. For a list of available values see "Node types". |
{Function} | callback |
Function to call for every child node. Accepts following parameters:
|
parseTree.forEach(function(childNode) {
doSomething();
});
parseTree.forEach('space', function(spaceNode) {
doSomething();
});
Gets nth child of the parseTree
. If no node has been found, returns null
.
{number} | index | Index number of node which we're looking for. |
{?Object} | A node. |
var node = parseTree.get(2);
doSomething(node);
Inserts a node to a given position in parseTree
.
{number} | index | Index of position where to insert the node. |
{Object} | node | A node to insert. |
let node = gonzales.createNode({type: 'animal', content: 'panda'});
parseTree.insert(2, node);
Checks whether the node is of given type.
{string} | type |
A node type against which to check type of parseTree .
For a list of available values see
"Node types".
|
{boolean} |
true if types are equal, false otherwise.
|
if (node.is('space')) {
node.content = '';
}
Gets the last child node. If type
parameter is passed, gets the last child
node of a given type. If no node has been found, returns null
.
{string=} | type | Optional. Node type to look for. For a list of available values see "Node types". |
{?Object} | A node. |
let node = parseTree.last();
node.content = 'panda';
let node = parseTree.last('multilineComment');
node.content = 'panda';
{number} | Number of child nodes. |
Removes a child node at a given position.
{number} | index | Index of a child node we need to remove. |
{Object} | Removed node. |
// Swap nodes.
var node = parseTree.removeChild(1);
parseTree.insert(0, node);
{Object} |
Start position of the node. Contains following info:
|
{string} | Syntax of original parsed string. |
Converts parse tree to JSON. Useful for printing.
{Object} | Parse tree in JSON |
Converts parse tree back to string according to original syntax.
{string} | A compiled string. |
let css = parseTree.toString();
Calls the function for every node in a tree including parseTree
itself.
{Function} | callback |
Function to apply to every node. Accepts following parameters:
|
parseTree.traverse(function(node, index, parent) {
if (node.is('multilineComment')) {
parent.removeChild(index);
} else if (node.is('space')) {
node.content = ' ';
}
});
This method should be called for a root node, because calling it for a child
will be more time consuming.
Calls the function for every node of a given type. This means not just child
nodes, but grandchilds and so on.
{string} | type | Node type. For a list of available values please see "Node types". |
{Function} | callback |
Function to apply to every node of a given type.
Accepts following parameters:
|
// Remove all comments.
parseTree.traverseByType('multilineComment', function(node, index, parent) {
parent.removeChild(index);
});
This method should be called for a root node, because calling it for a child
will be more time consuming.
Calls the function for every node of given types. This means not just child
nodes, but grandchilds and so on.
{Array.string} | types | List of node types. For a list of available values please see "Node types". |
{Function} | callback |
Function to apply to every node of given types.
Accepts following parameters:
|
// Remove all comments and spaces.
let types = ['multilineComment', 'space'];
parseTree.traverseByTypes(types, function(node, index, parent) {
parent.removeChild(index);
});
{string} | Node type. For a list of available values see "Node types". |
To run tests:
npm test
This command will build library files from sources and run tests on all files in syntax directories.
Every test has 3 files: source stylesheet, expected parse tree and expected string compiled back from parse tree to css.
If some tests fail, you can find information in test logs:
log/test.log
contains all information from stdout;log/expected.txt
contains only expected text;log/result.txt
contains only result text.
The last two are made for your convenience: you can use any diff app to see the defference between them.
If you want to test one specific string or get a general idea of how Gonzales
works, you can use test/ast.js
file.
Simply change the first two strings (css
and syntax
vars) and run:
node test/single-test.js
If you find a bug or want to add a feature, welcome to Issues.
If you are shy but have a question, feel free to drop me a line.