This tool generates browser-specific CSS, stripping unsupported features.
Supported features are:
- remove unused prefixed properties, e.g. if compiling for Firefox, remove the
-webkit-
s - keep
_
and*
hacks in IE67, remove in all other browsers - use cssprops library to strip unsupported properties
- remove empty delimiters, like
;;
(result of stripping things) - no media queries in IE < 9
More to come:
- caniuse.com data
- random observations and heuristics
- your input and contributions
Because CSS is on the critical path to rendering pages. It must be small! Or else!
Why send extra bytes the browser has no use for? Walk in Firefox's shoes for a minute. You've just served something like:
a {
filter: progid:microsoft:obladi:oblada:AlphaImageLoader(bananas.png);
}
You can imagine Firefox thinking: "This is BS... I mean ... too browser-specific! I've no use for this. And I don't appreciate you wasting my time. I could've been delighting your users with your gorgeous app and instead look at me - having to sift through this nonsense"
$ npm install bscss
The list of supported browsers is as follows:
- IE (6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11)
- Chrome
- Firefox
- Safari
- iOS Safari
- Opera
var bs = require('bscss');
var css =
'a{color: red; _color: blue; -o-stuff: cool; -ms-filter: 1}';
css = bs.transform(css, 'chrome');
This spits out only the color: red
, the rest is stripped.
bs.transform(css, 'ie7');
for example will keep the color:blue
too and remove the -
-prefixed properties.
In IE6 and IE7 the hack characters are removed, e.g. _color
becomes color
Available at http://bscss.csspatterns.com