Transforming styles with JS plugins
PostCSS is a tool for transforming styles with JS plugins.
These plugins can lint your CSS, support variables and mixins,
transpile future CSS syntax, inline images, and more.
PostCSS is used by industry leaders including Wikipedia, Twitter, Alibaba,
and JetBrains. The Autoprefixer and Stylelint PostCSS plugins is one of the most popular CSS tools.
Made at Evil Martians, product consulting for developer tools.
PostCSS needs your support. We are accepting donations
at Open Collective.
PostCSS takes a CSS file and provides an API to analyze and modify its rules
(by transforming them into an Abstract Syntax Tree).
This API can then be used by plugins to do a lot of useful things,
e.g., to find errors automatically, or to insert vendor prefixes.
Currently, PostCSS has more than 200 plugins. You can find all of the plugins
in the plugins list. Below is a list of our favorite plugins —
the best demonstrations of what can be built on top of PostCSS.
If you have any new ideas, PostCSS plugin development is really easy.
postcss-use
allows you to explicitly set PostCSS plugins within CSSpostcss-modules
and react-css-modules
automatically isolatepostcss-autoreset
is an alternative to using a global resetpostcss-initial
adds all: initial
support, which resetscq-prolyfill
adds container query support, allowing styles that respondautoprefixer
adds vendor prefixes, using data from Can I Use.postcss-preset-env
allows you to use future CSS features today.postcss-nested
unwraps nested rules the way Sass does.postcss-sorting
sorts the content of rules and at-rules.postcss-utilities
includes the most commonly used shortcuts and helpers.short
adds and extends numerous shorthand properties.postcss-url
postcss plugin to rebase url(), inline or copy asset.postcss-sprites
generates image sprites.font-magician
generates all the @font-face
rules needed in CSS.postcss-inline-svg
allows you to inline SVG and customize its styles.postcss-write-svg
allows you to write simple SVG directly in your CSS.webp-in-css
to use WebP image format in CSS background.avif-in-css
to use AVIF image format in CSS background.stylelint
is a modular stylesheet linter.stylefmt
is a tool that automatically formats CSSstylelint
rules.doiuse
lints CSS for browser support, using data from Can I Use.colorguard
helps you maintain a consistent color palette.cssnano
is a modular CSS minifier.lost
is a feature-rich calc()
grid system.rtlcss
mirrors styles for right-to-left locales.PostCSS can transform styles in any syntax, not just CSS.
If there is not yet support for your favorite syntax,
you can write a parser and/or stringifier to extend PostCSS.
sugarss
is a indent-based syntax like Sass or Stylus.postcss-syntax
switch syntax automatically by file extensions.postcss-html
parsing styles in <style>
tags of HTML-like files.postcss-markdown
parsing styles in code blocks of Markdown files.postcss-styled-syntax
parses styles in template literals CSS-in-JSpostcss-jsx
parsing CSS in template / object literals of source files.postcss-styled
parsing CSS in template literals of source files.postcss-scss
allows you to work with SCSSpostcss-sass
allows you to work with Sasspostcss-less
allows you to work with Lesspostcss-less-engine
allows you to work with Lesspostcss-js
allows you to write styles in JS or transformpostcss-safe-parser
finds and fixes CSS syntax errors.midas
converts a CSS string to highlighted HTML.More articles and videos you can find on awesome-postcss list.
You can start using PostCSS in just two steps:
The best way to use PostCSS with CSS-in-JS is astroturf
.
Add its loader to your webpack.config.js
:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
use: ['style-loader', 'postcss-loader'],
},
{
test: /\.jsx?$/,
use: ['babel-loader', 'astroturf/loader'],
}
]
}
}
Then create postcss.config.js
:
/** @type {import('postcss-load-config').Config} */
const config = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
require('postcss-nested')
]
}
module.exports = config
Parcel has built-in PostCSS support. It already uses Autoprefixer
and cssnano. If you want to change plugins, create postcss.config.js
in project’s root:
/** @type {import('postcss-load-config').Config} */
const config = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
require('postcss-nested')
]
}
module.exports = config
Parcel will even automatically install these plugins for you.
Please, be aware of the several issues in Version 1. Notice, Version 2 may resolve the issues via issue #2157.
Use postcss-loader
in webpack.config.js
:
module.exports = {
module: {
rules: [
{
test: /\.css$/,
exclude: /node_modules/,
use: [
{
loader: 'style-loader',
},
{
loader: 'css-loader',
options: {
importLoaders: 1,
}
},
{
loader: 'postcss-loader'
}
]
}
]
}
}
Then create postcss.config.js
:
/** @type {import('postcss-load-config').Config} */
const config = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
require('postcss-nested')
]
}
module.exports = config
Use gulp-postcss
and gulp-sourcemaps
.
gulp.task('css', () => {
const postcss = require('gulp-postcss')
const sourcemaps = require('gulp-sourcemaps')
return gulp.src('src/**/*.css')
.pipe( sourcemaps.init() )
.pipe( postcss([ require('autoprefixer'), require('postcss-nested') ]) )
.pipe( sourcemaps.write('.') )
.pipe( gulp.dest('build/') )
})
To use PostCSS from your command-line interface or with npm scripts
there is postcss-cli
.
postcss --use autoprefixer -o main.css css/*.css
If you want to compile CSS string in browser (for instance, in live edit
tools like CodePen), just use Browserify or webpack. They will pack
PostCSS and plugins files into a single file.
To apply PostCSS plugins to React Inline Styles, JSS, Radium
and other CSS-in-JS, you can use postcss-js
and transforms style objects.
const postcss = require('postcss-js')
const prefixer = postcss.sync([ require('autoprefixer') ])
prefixer({ display: 'flex' }) //=> { display: ['-webkit-box', '-webkit-flex', '-ms-flexbox', 'flex'] }
@lodder/grunt-postcss
posthtml-postcss
poststylus
rollup-plugin-postcss
postcss-brunch
broccoli-postcss
postcss
enb-postcss
taskr-postcss
start-postcss
postcss-middleware
svelte-preprocess
For other environments, you can use the JS API:
const autoprefixer = require('autoprefixer')
const postcss = require('postcss')
const postcssNested = require('postcss-nested')
const fs = require('fs')
fs.readFile('src/app.css', (err, css) => {
postcss([autoprefixer, postcssNested])
.process(css, { from: 'src/app.css', to: 'dest/app.css' })
.then(result => {
fs.writeFile('dest/app.css', result.css, () => true)
if ( result.map ) {
fs.writeFile('dest/app.css.map', result.map.toString(), () => true)
}
})
})
Read the PostCSS API documentation for more details about the JS API.
All PostCSS runners should pass PostCSS Runner Guidelines.
Most PostCSS runners accept two parameters:
Common options:
syntax
: an object providing a syntax parser and a stringifier.parser
: a special syntax parser (for example, SCSS).stringifier
: a special syntax output generator (for example, Midas).map
: source map options.from
: the input file name (most runners set it automatically).to
: the output file name (most runners set it automatically).In some situations it might be helpful to fail the build on any warning
from PostCSS or one of its plugins. This guarantees that no warnings
go unnoticed, and helps to avoid bugs. While there is no option to enable
treating warnings as errors, it can easily be done
by adding postcss-fail-on-warn
plugin in the end of PostCSS plugins:
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
require('postcss-fail-on-warn')
]
}
csstools.postcss
adds PostCSS support.Syntax-highlighting-for-PostCSS
adds PostCSS highlight.postcss.vim
adds PostCSS highlight.To get support for PostCSS in WebStorm and other JetBrains IDEs you need to install this plugin.
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