gulp-check-unused-css
v2.1.4
Published
Checks your CSS for unused classes in HTML templates
Downloads
767
Readme
gulp-check-unused-css
This tool ensures that all of your defined CSS classes are used in your HTML files, and vice versa. If your HTML uses any classes that you have not defined in your CSS files, or if there are css definitions that aren't being used, they will be reported.
This allows for removal of unused and redundant code which will both improve the readability of your project while also slightly reducing file size (and therefore the amount of data being transferred on load).
Going forward I would like to collaborate openly with any open source developers interested in improving this tool, and discuss features that they think are missing for their own particular use case. Please create issues to get the conversation started! :)
Why gulp-check-unused-css
Consider this Venn diagram:
Figure a) represents what you have now. Some classes are defined in your CSS, but never used in the templates. Some classes used in the templates don't appear in your CSS.
Figure b) represents what you actually want. Keeping your CSS and HTML clean improves the maintainability of your code. You don't want to send useless bytes to your users, because you want site loading to be as fast as possible.
gulp-check-unused-css
aims to check for the not-overlapping parts of figure a) and throw an error if it encounters them.
Installation
npm install --save-dev gulp-check-unused-css
Upgrading
If you are upgrading from 0.0.x
, you should really, REALLY read the docs again. Things that have changed since this plugin's original release:
- How you put HTML files in the plugin
- What this plugin actually checks
- When the plugin throws errors
- How to prevent those errors from breaking your build
- Inverted meaning of
angular
option (now off by default)
I didn't publish the two 1.x.y
versions, so no worries there.
Usage
Simple use:
var checkCSS = require( 'gulp-check-unused-css' );
gulp
.src([ 'styles/*.css', 'templates/*.html' ])
.pipe( checkCSS() );
For advanced use with gulp-watch
check out the Gulpfile.
Depending on the gulp version, you may have to return the gulp command like below:
var checkCSS = require( 'gulp-check-unused-css' );
return gulp
.src([ 'styles/*.css', 'templates/*.html' ])
.pipe( checkCSS() );
The plugin will emit all files you put in, because it has to read all of them before checking. Occasionally, however, it will break your pipe. This is good for automated build processes, e.g. in CI systems like Jenkins or Travis.
Options
ignore
: Array containing strings and/or regexes, if an unused class matches one of it, it is ignored.globals
: Array of strings identifying predefined sets of ignored classes.angular
: Boolean, passingtrue
will turn the support forng-class
on.
Ignoring Classes
This plugin is inspired by the workflow at Github, where a build fails if the classes used in the CSS and the templates do not overlap exactly. However, most of us do not write 100% of the CSS ourselves but rely on frameworks such as Bootstrap. That's why there are some options available to ignore "global" or "vendor" classes.
You can provide a list of class names or regular expressions that should be ignored.
gulp
.src( 'app.*' )
.pipe( checkCSS({
ignore: [ 'special-js-class', /^vendor-/ ]
}));
Since 1.1.0 you can also add globals: [ '{framework}@{version}' ]
to your options.
gulp
.src( 'app.*' )
.pipe( checkCSS({
globals: [ '[email protected]' ]
}));
And since 2.1.1, you can add your own globals. A "global" is only an array of strings or regexes, so you can do it like this:
gulp
.src( 'app.*' )
.pipe( checkCSS({
globals: [ [ 'ignore', /^custom-/ ] ]
}));
Or you can define a module that exports this array and require it:
// custom-global.js
module.exports = [ 'ignore', /^custom-/ ];
// Gulpfile
gulp
.src( 'app.*' )
.pipe( checkCSS({
globals: [ require( './custom-global' ) ]
}));
This way you could also automatically create your custom global.
Globals that Work out of the Box
- Bootstrap 3.2.0 (
[email protected]
)
Development
git clone gulp-check-unused-css
cd gulp-check-unused-css
npm install
# hack hack hack
npm test
Add a Global to the Project's Source
- Fork the project
- Acquire CSS file
cd gulp-check-unused-css
node util/extract.js --file { path to CSS file }
- Now there is a
.ignore
file (which is actually a CommonJS module) next to the file - Rename it appropriately to
{framework}@{version}.js
- Save it to
src/global
- Commit and submit a Pull Request
Changelog
2.1.1
: Support for custom globals2.0.1
: Fix main file for npm2.0.0
: Check HTML files, other breaking changes. See Upgrading1.1.0
: Add support for frameworks1.0.0
: JoinignoreClassNames
andignoreClassPatterns
toignore
0.0.8
: Add support for AngularJS syntax0.0.7
: I don't remember0.0.6
: Add check for empty or invalid CSS files0.0.5
: Fix bug where media queries in the CSS broke everything0.0.4
: Fix bug where those options could not be used together0.0.3
: IntroduceignoreClassNames
,ignoreClassPatterns
##Contributions/TODO List This project was recently revived and is actively and enthusiastically seeking contributors. Here's the plan for its next development phase:
- Improve code documentation
- Update dependencies and gulp tasks
- Add support for LESS/Sass
- ~~Add code coverage~~ (Done)
- Add project wiki
To get involved, just file a PR or ask for more information via Issues.
##License Copyright 2014 Zalando SE
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.