# postcss-value-parser [![Travis CI](https://travis-ci.org/TrySound/postcss-value-parser.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/TrySound/postcss-value-parser) Transforms CSS declaration values and at-rule parameters into a tree of nodes, and provides a simple traversal API. ## Usage ```js var valueParser = require('postcss-value-parser'); var cssBackgroundValue = 'url(foo.png) no-repeat 40px 73%'; var parsedValue = valueParser(cssBackgroundValue); // parsedValue exposes an API described below, // e.g. parsedValue.walk(..), parsedValue.toString(), etc. ``` For example, parsing the value `rgba(233, 45, 66, .5)` will return the following: ```js { nodes: [ { type: 'function', value: 'rgba', before: '', after: '', nodes: [ { type: 'word', value: '233' }, { type: 'div', value: ',', before: '', after: ' ' }, { type: 'word', value: '45' }, { type: 'div', value: ',', before: '', after: ' ' }, { type: 'word', value: '66' }, { type: 'div', value: ',', before: ' ', after: '' }, { type: 'word', value: '.5' } ] } ] } ``` If you wanted to convert each `rgba()` value in `sourceCSS` to a hex value, you could do so like this: ```js var valueParser = require('postcss-value-parser'); var parsed = valueParser(sourceCSS); // walk() will visit all the of the nodes in the tree, // invoking the callback for each. parsed.walk(function (node) { // Since we only want to transform rgba() values, // we can ignore anything else. if (node.type !== 'function' && node.value !== 'rgba') return; // We can make an array of the rgba() arguments to feed to a // convertToHex() function var color = node.nodes.filter(function (node) { return node.type === 'word'; }).map(function (node) { return Number(node.value); }); // [233, 45, 66, .5] // Now we will transform the existing rgba() function node // into a word node with the hex value node.type = 'word'; node.value = convertToHex(color); }) parsed.toString(); // #E92D42 ``` ## Nodes Each node is an object with these common properties: - **type**: The type of node (`word`, `string`, `div`, `space`, `comment`, or `function`). Each type is documented below. - **value**: Each node has a `value` property; but what exactly `value` means is specific to the node type. Details are documented for each type below. - **sourceIndex**: The starting index of the node within the original source string. For example, given the source string `10px 20px`, the `word` node whose value is `20px` will have a `sourceIndex` of `5`. ### word The catch-all node type that includes keywords (e.g. `no-repeat`), quantities (e.g. `20px`, `75%`, `1.5`), and hex colors (e.g. `#e6e6e6`). Node-specific properties: - **value**: The "word" itself. ### string A quoted string value, e.g. `"something"` in `content: "something";`. Node-specific properties: - **value**: The text content of the string. - **quote**: The quotation mark surrounding the string, either `"` or `'`. - **unclosed**: `true` if the string was not closed properly. e.g. `"unclosed string `. ### div A divider, for example - `,` in `animation-duration: 1s, 2s, 3s` - `/` in `border-radius: 10px / 23px` - `:` in `(min-width: 700px)` Node-specific properties: - **value**: The divider character. Either `,`, `/`, or `:` (see examples above). - **before**: Whitespace before the divider. - **after**: Whitespace after the divider. ### space Whitespace used as a separator, e.g. ` ` occurring twice in `border: 1px solid black;`. Node-specific properties: - **value**: The whitespace itself. ### comment A CSS comment starts with `/*` and ends with `*/` Node-specific properties: - **value**: The comment value without `/*` and `*/` - **unclosed**: `true` if the comment was not closed properly. e.g. `/* comment without an end `. ### function A CSS function, e.g. `rgb(0,0,0)` or `url(foo.bar)`. Function nodes have nodes nested within them: the function arguments. Additional properties: - **value**: The name of the function, e.g. `rgb` in `rgb(0,0,0)`. - **before**: Whitespace after the opening parenthesis and before the first argument, e.g. ` ` in `rgb( 0,0,0)`. - **after**: Whitespace before the closing parenthesis and after the last argument, e.g. ` ` in `rgb(0,0,0 )`. - **nodes**: More nodes representing the arguments to the function. - **unclosed**: `true` if the parentheses was not closed properly. e.g. `( unclosed-function `. Media features surrounded by parentheses are considered functions with an empty value. For example, `(min-width: 700px)` parses to these nodes: ```js [ { type: 'function', value: '', before: '', after: '', nodes: [ { type: 'word', value: 'min-width' }, { type: 'div', value: ':', before: '', after: ' ' }, { type: 'word', value: '700px' } ] } ] ``` `url()` functions can be parsed a little bit differently depending on whether the first character in the argument is a quotation mark. `url( /gfx/img/bg.jpg )` parses to: ```js { type: 'function', sourceIndex: 0, value: 'url', before: ' ', after: ' ', nodes: [ { type: 'word', sourceIndex: 5, value: '/gfx/img/bg.jpg' } ] } ``` `url( "/gfx/img/bg.jpg" )`, on the other hand, parses to: ```js { type: 'function', sourceIndex: 0, value: 'url', before: ' ', after: ' ', nodes: [ type: 'string', sourceIndex: 5, quote: '"', value: '/gfx/img/bg.jpg' }, ] } ``` ### unicode-range The unicode-range CSS descriptor sets the specific range of characters to be used from a font defined by @font-face and made available for use on the current page (`unicode-range: U+0025-00FF`). Node-specific properties: - **value**: The "unicode-range" itself. ## API ``` var valueParser = require('postcss-value-parser'); ``` ### valueParser.unit(quantity) Parses `quantity`, distinguishing the number from the unit. Returns an object like the following: ```js // Given 2rem { number: '2', unit: 'rem' } ``` If the `quantity` argument cannot be parsed as a number, returns `false`. *This function does not parse complete values*: you cannot pass it `1px solid black` and expect `px` as the unit. Instead, you should pass it single quantities only. Parse `1px solid black`, then pass it the stringified `1px` node (a `word` node) to parse the number and unit. ### valueParser.stringify(nodes[, custom]) Stringifies a node or array of nodes. The `custom` function is called for each `node`; return a string to override the default behaviour. ### valueParser.walk(nodes, callback[, bubble]) Walks each provided node, recursively walking all descendent nodes within functions. Returning `false` in the `callback` will prevent traversal of descendent nodes (within functions). You can use this feature to for shallow iteration, walking over only the *immediate* children. *Note: This only applies if `bubble` is `false` (which is the default).* By default, the tree is walked from the outermost node inwards. To reverse the direction, pass `true` for the `bubble` argument. The `callback` is invoked with three arguments: `callback(node, index, nodes)`. - `node`: The current node. - `index`: The index of the current node. - `nodes`: The complete nodes array passed to `walk()`. Returns the `valueParser` instance. ### var parsed = valueParser(value) Returns the parsed node tree. ### parsed.nodes The array of nodes. ### parsed.toString() Stringifies the node tree. ### parsed.walk(callback[, bubble]) Walks each node inside `parsed.nodes`. See the documentation for `valueParser.walk()` above. # License MIT © [Bogdan Chadkin](mailto:trysound@yandex.ru)