Writing Your First PostCSS Plugin

Writing Your First PostCSS Plugin
James Steinbach

UX Developer

James Steinbach

Why Use PostCSS?

You may already be using Sass or Less to add logic to your CSS workflow: variables, if/else statements, functions, and mixins. However, there are some limitations to those preprocessors. What if you need to add a CSS property or two based on the presence of other CSS properties?

For example, we’ve worked a lot on progressive web apps here at DockYard lately. We want that nice native-feeling elastic/inertia scrolling whenever we have an element with overflow: scroll (or overflow-x / overflow-y). Everywhere we make an element scrollable, we’d need to add -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch. Preprocessors don’t have a way to detect what properties are in a given selector block, so we’d need a verbose mixin solution. Additionally, we don’t use a preprocessor on every project, so we needed a PostCSS solution.

For the sake of comparison, here’s how we might implement a Sass mixin for this scrolling behavior:

@mixin overflow-scroll($direction: false) {
  $property: if($direction, 'overflow-#{$direction}', 'overflow');

  #{$property}: overflow;
  -webkit-overflow-scrolling: touch;
}

See that mixin in use on Sassmeister.

This approach works, but it has some significant shortcomings. First, you’re not writing spec CSS anymore: you’re writing a more verbose abstraction. Any dev who comes to this codebase has to learn another abstraction. Second, this isn’t well-automated. If you forget to use the mixin, you don’t get the extra property.

PostCSS, on the other hand, automates this fully with no need for a written abstraction. A PostCSS plugin can find any selector block with a scrolling overflow and insert the additional property automatically.

What Is PostCSS?

Before we get into the actual plugin writing process, let’s understand what PostCSS is. PostCSS allows us to manipulate our CSS with JavaScript functions. It does 3 things to accomplish that:

  1. PostCSS turns your CSS file into a JS object.
  2. PostCSS plugins can loop through the object and add/remove/modify selectors and properties.
  3. PostCSS converts that object back to a CSS file.

If you’re interested in practical value of PostCSS, you can read more about why DockYard transitioned to PostCSS and our PostCSS package: Narwin-Pack.

There are dozens of PostCSS plugins already available, openly maintained, and published to npm.

What if you have a use case that’s not covered by an existing plugin? (Perhaps like the one we discussed above?)

Writing a PostCSS Plugin

The PostCSS team has done a great job removing obstacles to writing your own plugin. The rest of this tutorial assumes a few things about your skill level:

  1. that you’re comfortable with git and the command line,
  2. that you can write JavaScript functions, and
  3. that you have node installed and know how to install npm modules

Clone the PostCSS Plugin Boilerplate Repo

Head over to your terminal and clone the PostCSS Plugin Boilerplate repo

$ git clone git@github.com:postcss/postcss-plugin-boilerplate.git

Next, run the wizard script from that repo:

$ node ./postcss-plugin-boilerplate/start

This script will ask you several questions in your terminal. It’ll pull your name and email address from your local git profile (if you’ve set that up), and then ask you for your Github username.

Next, you’ll choose your plugin name. It’ll begin with postcss- and you’ll complete the name. The wizard will then ask you to finish a sentence describing what your plugin will do. Finally, it’ll start a comma-separated list of tags for you to complete.

‘PostCSS Plugin Boilerplate wizard’

Once you’ve finished this setup, you’ll have a boilerplate directory: the wizard created it with the same name that you chose for your plugin while answering the script’s questions. Let’s head over to that directory:

$ cd postcss-test-plugin

In it, you’ll find some familiar components of a node-based project: index.js, package.json, a node_modules directory. You’ll put your logic in index.js: the functions that manipulate the CSS. If you have any other node module dependencies for your plugin, package.json will manage them and install them in node_modules.

The Boilerplate Code in index.js

Let’s start by looking at the boilerplate code provided in index.js:

var postcss = require('postcss');

The first thing it does is grab the necessary prerequisite: the PostCSS library itself. The code that follows relies on having access to PostCSS.

module.exports = postcss.plugin('postcss-test-plugin', function (opts) {
    opts = opts || {};
    // Work with options here
    return function (root, result) {
        // Transform CSS AST here
    };
});

This block of code is the part that actually contains instructions for manipulating your CSS.

The first thing we’ll need to do is walk through all the declaration blocks in the stylesheet. The root parameter inside the return function has a method for that: .walkRules().

Looping Through Each Selector Block

We’ll upgrade the boilerplate with .walkRules() to loop through every declaration block and let us access the styles in it:

root.walkRules(function(rule) {
  // We'll put more code here in a moment…
});

Now that we’re walking through each selector block, we need to see if it contains a overflow property. To access those properties, we’ll use the .walkDecls() method that’s part of the rule passed to the function above.

Looping Through Each Property

rule.walkDecls(function(decl) {
  // We work with each `decl` object here.
});

Inside this loop, decl is an object representing a style declaration. It contains data about the property-value pair as well as some methods for manipulating it. The two most important things for our case are decl.prop (the property name) and decl.value (the property value).

Finding Overflow Properties

To detect if a decl is overflow-related, we could put an if statement inside this loop: if (decl.prop.indexOf('overflow') === 0), but there’s a more efficient way to do that. PostCSS lets us filter for specific properties in the .walkDecls() method. You can find this in the PostCSS API Documentation. We don’t need that if statement if we filter for the overflow property like this:

rule.walkDecls('overflow', function(decl) {
  // We work with the `decl` object here.
});

This isn’t quite right, however. It’s only going to find the overflow property. If we want to account for overflow-x and overflow-y also (and we do), we need to adjust that filter a bit. This prop parameter doesn’t take an array of property names (I tried ['overflow', 'overflow-x', 'overflow-y'], but no luck). To match multiple properties, we’ll have to use a bit of RegEx: /^overflow-?/. Here’s a quick explanation for that syntax: the ^ means the property name has to start with overflow; the -? means “there might or might not be a - after the word overflow. Notice that we don’t use '' around the regex. This brings us to:

rule.walkDecls(/^overflow-?/, function(decl) {
  // We work with the `decl` object here.
});

Preventing Duplicate Properties

It’s taken a bit of time, but now we’re almost there: this code will loop through all the selector blocks in our stylesheet, then loop through all the overflow-related properties in those selectors. All that’s left to do is insert our property. The next block of code will check to see if the overflow-related property’s value is scroll and if so, add the property that makes it feel more native.

if (decl.value === 'scroll') {
  rule.append({
    prop: '-webkit-overflow-scrolling',
    value: 'touch'
  });
}

In this case, we are resorting to an if statement. The loop we wrote a moment ago filtered properties so this function only runs on decl objects where the property starts with overflow-?. Now, if decl.value is scroll, we’ll add a property-value pair to the parent rule object. We’re almost done now. It’s possible that someone might have already included the -webkit-overflow-scrolling property. We don’t want to duplicate it. PostCSS has a function that lets us check to see if a given property is already in a selector block:

var hasTouch = rule.some(function(i) {
  return i.prop === '-webkit-overflow-scrolling';
});
if (!hasTouch) {
  rule.append({
    prop: '-webkit-overflow-scrolling',
    value: 'touch'
  });
}

Now we’ve got a better function: if a developer intentionally put the -webkit-overflow-scrolling where it was needed, we won’t duplicate it.

Conclusion

In just 20 lines of code, we’ve created a useful PostCSS plugin.

var postcss = require('postcss');
module.exports = postcss.plugin('postcss-test-plugin', function() {
  return function(root) {
    root.walkRules(function(rule) {
      rule.walkDecls(/^overflow-?/, function(decl) {
        if (decl.value === 'scroll') {
          var hasTouch = rule.some(function(i) {
            return i.prop === '-webkit-overflow-scrolling';
          });
          if (!hasTouch) {
            rule.append({
              prop: '-webkit-overflow-scrolling',
              value: 'touch'
            });
          }
        }
      });
    });
  };
});

Of course, there are more complications that we’d consider for production purposes:

  • We could add a CSS comment syntax that allows developers to exclude certain selector blocks from getting elastic scrolling added.
  • We may want to allow option parameters so that this plugin only automates elastic scrolling on the x or y axis.
  • We need to work on index.test.js so we can ensure this keeps working through any code updates.

But, all things considered, we did put together a working plugin pretty quickly. Hopefully, you’re able to take this walk-through and put together your own PostCSS plugins in the future!

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