CSS Selector Generator
- Generates shortest selectors
- Unique selectors per page
- Stable and robust selectors
- 2.9 kB gzip and minify size
npm install @medv/finder
import finder from '@medv/finder'
document.addEventListener('click', event => {
const selector = finder(event.target)
console.log(selector)
})
Example of generated selector:
.blog > article:nth-child(3) .add-comment
finder
takes configuration object as second parameters. Here is example of all params with default values:
const selector = finder(event.target, {
root: document.body,
className: (name) => true,
tagName: (name) => true,
attr: (name, value) => false,
seedMinLength: 1,
optimizedMinLength: 2,
threshold: 1000
})
Root of search, defaults to document.body
.
Check if this ID can be used. For example you can restrict using framework specific IDs:
const selector = finder(event.target, {
idName: name => !name.startsWith('ember')
})
Check if this class name can be used. For example you can restrict using is-* class names:
const selector = finder(event.target, {
className: name => !name.startsWith('is-')
})
Check if tag name can be used, same as className
.
Check if attr name can be used.
Minimum length of levels in fining selector. Starts from 1
.
For more robust selectors give this param value around 4-5 depending on depth of you DOM tree.
If finder
hits root
this param is ignored.
Minimum length for optimising selector. Starts from 2
.
For example selector body > div > div > p
can be optimized to body p
.
Max number of selectors to check before falling into nth-child
usage.
Checking for uniqueness of selector is very costs operation, if you have DOM tree depth of 5, with 5 classes on each level,
that gives you more than 3k selectors to check.
finder
uses two step approach so it's reaching this threshold in some cases twice.
Default 1000
is good enough in most cases.
Generate the unique selectors in your browser by using Chrome Extension
MIT