Autoprefixer is a tool to parse CSS and add vendor prefixes to CSS rules using values from the Can I Use. This gem provides Ruby and Ruby on Rails integration with this JavaScript tool.
Windows users should install node.js. Autoprefixer Rails doesn’t work with old JScript in Windows.
Add the autoprefixer-rails gem to your Gemfile:
gem "autoprefixer-rails"Clear your cache:
rake tmp:clearWrite your CSS (Sass, Stylus, LESS) rules without vendor prefixes
and Autoprefixer will apply prefixes for you.
For example in app/assets/stylesheet/foobar.sass:
:fullscreen a
display: flexAutoprefixer uses Can I Use database with browser statistics and properties support to add vendor prefixes automatically using the Asset Pipeline:
:-webkit-full-screen a {
display: -webkit-box;
display: -webkit-flex;
display: flex
}
:-moz-full-screen a {
display: flex
}
:-ms-fullscreen a {
display: -ms-flexbox;
display: flex
}
:fullscreen a {
display: -webkit-box;
display: -webkit-flex;
display: -ms-flexbox;
display: flex
}If you need to specify browsers for your Rails project, you can save them
to browserslist config in app root. See Browserslist docs for config format.
last 1 version
> 1%
Explorer 10
You can get what properties will be changed using a Rake task:
rake autoprefixer:infoIf you use Sinatra or other non-Rails frameworks with Sprockets, just connect your Sprockets environment with Autoprefixer and write CSS in the usual way:
assets = Sprockets::Environment.new do |env|
# Your assets settings
end
require "autoprefixer-rails"
AutoprefixerRails.install(assets)If you need to call Autoprefixer from plain Ruby code, it’s very easy:
require "autoprefixer-rails"
prefixed = AutoprefixerRails.process(css, from: 'main.css').cssYou can specify browsers by browsers option:
AutoprefixerRails.process(css, from: 'a.css', browsers: ['> 1%', 'ie 10']).cssBy default, Autoprefixer will change CSS indentation to create nice visual cascade of prefixes.
a {
-webkit-box-sizing: border-box;
-moz-box-sizing: border-box;
box-sizing: border-box
}You can disable it by cascade: false in config/autoprefixer.yml
or in process() options.
If you have legacy code with non-valid CSS hacks, you can enable Safe Mode and Autoprefixer will try to fix broken CSS.
Add safe: on to config/autoprefixer.yml or use safe: true option
in process method.
Autoprefixer will generate source map, if you set map option to true in
process method.
You must set input and output CSS files paths (by from and to options)
to generate correct map.
result = AutoprefixerRails.process(css,
map: true,
from: 'main.css',
to: 'main.out.css')Autoprefixer can also modify previous source map (for example, from Sass
compilation). Just set original source map content (as string) to map option:
result = AutoprefixerRails.process(css, {
map: File.read('main.sass.css.map'),
from: 'main.sass.css',
to: 'main.min.css')
result.map #=> Source map from main.sass to main.min.cssSee all options in PostCSS docs. AutoprefixerRails will convert Ruby style
to JS style, so you can use map: { sources_content: false }
instead of camelcase sourcesContent.