zhouwenbin / sublime-cssnext

Sublime plugin to use tomorrow's CSS syntax.

Geek Repo:Geek Repo

Github PK Tool:Github PK Tool

sublime-cssnext

Sublime plugin to use tomorrow's CSS syntax

cssnext is a CSS transpiler that allows you to use the latest CSS syntax today. It transforms CSS specs into more compatible CSS so you don’t need to wait for browser support.

Install

Install cssnext with Package Control and restart Sublime.

You need to have Node.js >=0.12.0 installed.
Make sure it's in your $PATH by running node -v in your command-line.
On OS X you need to make sure it's in /usr/local/bin or symlink it there.

Getting started

In a CSS file, open the Command Palette (Cmd+Shift+P) and choose cssnext. You can alternatively create one or more selections before running the command to only prefix those parts.

Options

(Preferences > Package Settings > Cssnext > Settings - User)

You can specify which browsers you need to support using an array of rules.

See the supported browser names.

Default

{
	"browsers": ["last 2 versions"]
}

Example

{
	"browsers": ["last 1 version", "> 10%", "> 5% in US", "ie 8", "ie 7"]
}

This will add the needed prefixes for the last version of each browser, all browsers with market share of more than 10% globally and 5% in the US, and Internet Explorer 7 and 8.

Keyboard shortcut

You can also set up a keyboard shortcut to run the command by opening up "Preferences > Key Bindings - User" and adding your shortcut with the cssnext command.

Example:

[
	{ "keys": ["alt+super+p"], "command": "cssnext" }
]

Project settings

You can override the default and user settings for individual projects. Just add an "Autoprefixer" object to the "settings" object in the project's .sublime-project file containing your project specific settings.

Example:

{
	"settings": {
		"Autoprefixer": {
			"browsers": ["last 1 version"]
		}
	}
}

License

MIT © zhowenbin

sublime-autoprefixer thanks Sindre Sorhus

postcss-cssnext thanks cssnext

About

Sublime plugin to use tomorrow's CSS syntax.

License:MIT License


Languages

Language:Python 40.8%Language:JavaScript 23.5%Language:HTML 19.4%Language:CSS 16.3%