6.6 KiB
API Reference
Overview
@adobe/css-tools provides a modern CSS parser and stringifier with comprehensive TypeScript support. It can parse CSS into an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) and convert the AST back to CSS with various formatting options.
Installation
npm install @adobe/css-tools
Core Functions
parse(code, options?)
Parses CSS code and returns an Abstract Syntax Tree (AST).
Parameters
code(string) - The CSS code to parseoptions(object, optional) - Parsing optionssilent(boolean) - Silently fail on parse errors instead of throwing. Whentrue, errors are collected inast.stylesheet.parsingErrorssource(string) - File path for better error reporting
Returns
CssStylesheetAST- The parsed CSS as an AST
Example
import { parse } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const css = `
.example {
color: red;
font-size: 16px;
}
`;
const ast = parse(css);
console.log(ast.stylesheet.rules);
stringify(ast, options?)
Converts a CSS AST back to CSS string with configurable formatting.
Parameters
ast(CssStylesheetAST) - The CSS AST to stringifyoptions(CompilerOptions, optional) - Stringification optionsindent(string) - Indentation string (default:' ')compress(boolean) - Whether to compress/minify the output (default:false)
Returns
string- The formatted CSS string
Example
import { parse, stringify } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const css = '.example { color: red; }';
const ast = parse(css);
// Pretty print
const formatted = stringify(ast, { indent: ' ' });
console.log(formatted);
// Output:
// .example {
// color: red;
// }
// Compressed
const minified = stringify(ast, { compress: true });
console.log(minified);
// Output: .example{color:red}
Type Definitions
Core Types
CssStylesheetAST
The root AST node representing a complete CSS stylesheet.
type CssStylesheetAST = {
type: CssTypes.stylesheet;
stylesheet: {
source?: string;
rules: CssRuleAST[];
parsingErrors?: CssParseError[];
};
};
CssRuleAST
Represents a CSS rule (selector + declarations).
type CssRuleAST = {
type: CssTypes.rule;
selectors: string[];
declarations: CssDeclarationAST[];
position?: CssPosition;
parent?: CssStylesheetAST;
};
CssDeclarationAST
Represents a CSS property declaration.
type CssDeclarationAST = {
type: CssTypes.declaration;
property: string;
value: string;
position?: CssPosition;
parent?: CssRuleAST;
};
CssMediaAST
Represents a CSS @media rule.
type CssMediaAST = {
type: CssTypes.media;
media: string;
rules: CssRuleAST[];
position?: CssPosition;
parent?: CssStylesheetAST;
};
CssKeyframesAST
Represents a CSS @keyframes rule.
type CssKeyframesAST = {
type: CssTypes.keyframes;
name: string;
keyframes: CssKeyframeAST[];
position?: CssPosition;
parent?: CssStylesheetAST;
};
CssPosition
Represents source position information.
type CssPosition = {
source?: string;
start: {
line: number;
column: number;
};
end: {
line: number;
column: number;
};
};
CssParseError
Represents a parsing error.
type CssParseError = {
message: string;
reason: string;
filename?: string;
line: number;
column: number;
source?: string;
};
Compiler Options
CompilerOptions
Options for the stringifier.
type CompilerOptions = {
indent?: string; // Default: ' '
compress?: boolean; // Default: false
};
Error Handling
Silent Parsing
When parsing malformed CSS, you can use the silent option to collect errors instead of throwing:
import { parse } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const malformedCss = `
body { color: red; }
{ color: blue; } /* Missing selector */
.valid { background: green; }
`;
const result = parse(malformedCss, { silent: true });
if (result.stylesheet.parsingErrors) {
result.stylesheet.parsingErrors.forEach(error => {
console.log(`Error at line ${error.line}: ${error.message}`);
});
}
// Valid rules are still parsed
console.log('Valid rules:', result.stylesheet.rules.length);
Source Tracking
Enable source tracking for better error reporting:
import { parse } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const css = 'body { color: red; }';
const ast = parse(css, { source: 'styles.css' });
const rule = ast.stylesheet.rules[0];
console.log(rule.position?.source); // "styles.css"
console.log(rule.position?.start); // { line: 1, column: 1 }
console.log(rule.position?.end); // { line: 1, column: 20 }
Advanced Usage
Working with At-Rules
import { parse, stringify } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const css = `
@media (max-width: 768px) {
.container {
padding: 10px;
}
}
@keyframes fadeIn {
from { opacity: 0; }
to { opacity: 1; }
}
`;
const ast = parse(css);
// Access media rules
const mediaRule = ast.stylesheet.rules.find(rule => rule.type === 'media');
console.log(mediaRule.media); // "(max-width: 768px)"
// Access keyframes
const keyframesRule = ast.stylesheet.rules.find(rule => rule.type === 'keyframes');
console.log(keyframesRule.name); // "fadeIn"
Custom Formatting
import { parse, stringify } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const css = '.example{color:red;font-size:16px}';
const ast = parse(css);
// Custom indentation
const formatted = stringify(ast, { indent: ' ' });
console.log(formatted);
// Output:
// .example {
// color: red;
// font-size: 16px;
// }
// Compressed with no spaces
const compressed = stringify(ast, { compress: true });
console.log(compressed);
// Output: .example{color:red;font-size:16px}
TypeScript Integration
The library provides comprehensive TypeScript support with full type definitions for all AST nodes and functions:
import { parse, stringify, type CssStylesheetAST } from '@adobe/css-tools';
const css: string = '.example { color: red; }';
const ast: CssStylesheetAST = parse(css);
const output: string = stringify(ast);
Performance Considerations
- The parser is optimized for large CSS files
- AST nodes are lightweight and memory-efficient
- Stringification is fast and supports streaming for large outputs
- Consider using
compress: truefor production builds to reduce file size
Browser Support
The library works in all modern browsers and Node.js environments. For older environments, you may need to use a bundler with appropriate polyfills.