postcss-plugins
browserslist
postcss-plugins | browserslist | |
---|---|---|
12 | 55 | |
837 | 12,714 | |
1.7% | 0.5% | |
9.9 | 7.8 | |
5 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
CSS | JavaScript | |
MIT No Attribution | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
postcss-plugins
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PostCSS - my initial experience
the author of the most popular PostCSS plugin himself recommended the postcss-preset-env over his own creation which is cssnex, and
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CSS Is Fun Again
The example in A) won't work as the plugin can't convert the functions with variables in it. https://github.com/csstools/postcss-plugins/tree/main/plugin...
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What are some harsh truths that r/webdev needs to hear?
You can use this today if you're using PostCSS in your build process (which is the case if you use autoprefixer)! https://preset-env.cssdb.org/
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Vanilla+PostCSS as an Alternative to SCSS
Switching from a ready-made tool like Sass or a recommendation package like cssnext (deprecated since 2019) or PostCSS Preset Env (archived in 2022), to the modular PostCSS Preset Env plugin set we can choose a helpful and convenient set of future CSS features beyond the current stable client CSS.
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More CSS reactions
To implement :has support, the css-has-pseudo polyfill can be used. This polyfill includes both a PostCSS plugin and a JS function to be used in the HTML page.
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CSS nesting is coming
Yes, it's behind a flag and only in future versions, but it is a huge step forward. Those versions will soon be available, and we can try it locally (unfortunately, not on production without a polyfill or a plugin).
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The Complete Guide for Setting Up React App from Scratch (feat. TypeScript)
w/ postcss-preset-env(v7.8.3): convert modern CSS into something most browsers can understand, determining the polyfills you need based on your targeted browsers or runtime environments. It takes the support data that comes from MDN and Can I Use and determine from a browserlist whether those transformations are needed. It also packs Autoprefixer within and shares the list with it, so prefixes are only applied when you're going to need them given your browser support list.
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In terms of styling, how does the structure of your project using traditional CSS look like?
There's a @ custom-media proposal (and PostCSS plugin) that can make it a lot easier to use media queries across components. Define your MQs in your global CSS, use everywhere. If you're worried about repeating MQs in your CSS from a bloat perspective, there are PostCSS plugins for that as well.
- Is there a way to shorten .contactform h2,… and to say something like .contactform (h2, ul, label)?
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Is a bracket within a bracket possible? (HTML/CSSS)
The term you are looking for is "nesting". CSS currently does not support it. But there is a draft being worked on. No browser currently supports it, though. Most CSS Pre- or Postprocessors like Sass, Less, Stylus, PostCSS support nesting.
browserslist
- Browserslist/browserslist: `not and_UC all`
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Shoelace: A forward-thinking library of web components
Not these days, where most people are using evergreen browsers and iOS users upgrade very quickly.
Take a look at the defaults for browserslist, for example:
https://browsersl.ist/#q=defaults
It just barely supports Safari 15, on iOS only, and that’s likely to go away imminently because it’s under 1% usage.
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How to Clone an Object in JavaScript
browserslist
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How we improved page load speed for Next.js ecommerce website by 1.5 times
We compile JS only for modern browsers. The list of default browsers in Next can be overridden in your browserslist.
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The Need for Speed: Next.js Performance Overhaul with Polyfills and SWC
In the latest versions of Next.js, targeting specific browsers or features is a breeze using the Browserslist configuration in your package.json file. The latest version of Next.js (v13) uses the following configuration by default:
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How can I find out if I should support IE 9/10/11?
For a more general answer to browser support, check out https://github.com/browserslist/browserslist. That seems to be standard tool to help you with that.
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WebGPU hits 40% availability 2 weeks after Chrome releases support
As someone else pointed out, you're overestimating Chrome/ium's market share.
Regardless, after the web.dev/baseline announcement, I looked at Browslerlist and one of our site's analytics and it is shocking how many people are not using the last two versions of evergreen browsers. There is a long tail of browser versions in those stats.
https://browsersl.ist
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Baseline: a unified view of stable web features
The way folks handle this in production is with browserslist, which lets you query on different things you want to support: https://github.com/browserslist/browserslist. This in turn tells other parts of your tooling what language features to transpile for production.
I imagine tools could be built on top of that which do what you’re asking too
- Browserslist
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Configure Stimulus with esbuild and Babel — Rails & Javascript
# .browserslist.rc # Babel Preset configuration # -------------------------- # Defines web-browser compatibility parameters for Babel to transpile your JS code. # This configuration is used by babel.config.js. # More information in here. # https://github.com/browserslist/browserslist # Support browsers with a market share higher than 5% >10%
What are some alternatives?
tailwindcss - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development. [Moved to: https://github.com/tailwindlabs/tailwindcss]
autoprefixer - Parse CSS and add vendor prefixes to rules by Can I Use
css-experiments
parcel - The zero configuration build tool for the web. 📦🚀
css-houdini-drafts - Mirror of https://hg.css-houdini.org/drafts
caniuse - Raw browser/feature support data from caniuse.com
cssnano - A modular minifier, built on top of the PostCSS ecosystem. [Moved to: https://github.com/cssnano/cssnano]
rollup-plugin-postcss - Seamless integration between Rollup and PostCSS.
awesome-typescript-loader - Awesome TypeScript loader for webpack
ECMAScript 6 compatibility table - ECMAScript compatibility tables
react-refresh-webpack-plugin - A Webpack plugin to enable "Fast Refresh" (also previously known as Hot Reloading) for React components.
rollup-plugin-terser - Rollup plugin to minify generated bundle