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Input Validation Vulnerabilities Dominate MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 List
MITRE's 2024 CWE Top 25 highlights critical software vulnerabilities like XSS, SQL Injection, and CSRF, reflecting shifts due to a refined ranking methodology.
@akylas/nativescript
Advanced tools
CSS parser / stringifier.
$ npm install css
var css = require('css');
var obj = css.parse('body { font-size: 12px; }', options);
css.stringify(obj, options);
Accepts a CSS string and returns an AST object
.
options
:
css
. Makes errors and source
maps more helpful, by letting them know where code comes from.var ast = css.parse('body { font-size: 12px; }', { source: 'source.css' });
Errors will have error.position
, just like node.position
. The
error contains the source position in the message. To get the error message
without the position use error.reason
.
If you create any errors in plugins such as in
rework, you must set the position
as well for consistency.
All nodes have the following properties.
Information about the position in the source string that corresponds to the node.
Object
:
Object
:
Number
.Number
.Object
:
Number
.Number
.String
or undefined
. The value of options.source
if passed to
css.parse
. Otherwise undefined
.String
. The full source string passed to css.parse
.The line and column numbers are 1-based: The first line is 1 and the first column of a line is 1 (not 0).
The position
property lets you know from which source file the node comes
from (if available), what that file contains, and what part of that file was
parsed into the node.
String
. The possible values are the ones listed in the Types section below.
A reference to the parent node, or null
if the node has no parent.
The available values of node.type
are listed below, as well as the available
properties of each node (other than the common properties listed above.)
The root node returned by css.parse
.
Object
:
Array
of nodes with the types rule
, comment
and any of the
at-rule types.Array
of String
s. The list of selectors of the rule, split
on commas. Each selector is trimmed from whitespace and comments.Array
of nodes with the types declaration
and comment
.String
. The property name, trimmed from whitespace and
comments. May not be empty.String
. The value of the property, trimmed from whitespace and
comments. Empty values are allowed.A rule-level or declaration-level comment. Comments inside selectors, properties and values etc. are lost.
String
. The part between the starting /*
and the ending */
of the comment, including whitespace.The @charset
at-rule.
String
. The part following @charset
.The @custom-media
at-rule.
String
. The --
-prefixed name.String
. The part following the name.The @document
at-rule.
String
. The part following @document
.String
or undefined
. The vendor prefix in @document
, or
undefined
if there is none.Array
of nodes with the types rule
, comment
and any of the
at-rule types.The @font-face
at-rule.
Array
of nodes with the types declaration
and comment
.The @host
at-rule.
Array
of nodes with the types rule
, comment
and any of the
at-rule types.The @import
at-rule.
String
. The part following @import
.The @keyframes
at-rule.
String
. The name of the keyframes rule.String
or undefined
. The vendor prefix in @keyframes
, or
undefined
if there is none.Array
of nodes with the types keyframe
and comment
.Array
of String
s. The list of “selectors” of the keyframe rule,
split on commas. Each “selector” is trimmed from whitespace.Array
of nodes with the types declaration
and comment
.The @media
at-rule.
String
. The part following @media
.Array
of nodes with the types rule
, comment
and any of the
at-rule types.The @namespace
at-rule.
String
. The part following @namespace
.The @page
at-rule.
Array
of String
s. The list of selectors of the rule, split
on commas. Each selector is trimmed from whitespace and comments.Array
of nodes with the types declaration
and comment
.The @supports
at-rule.
String
. The part following @supports
.Array
of nodes with the types rule
, comment
and any of the
at-rule types.CSS:
body {
background: #eee;
color: #888;
}
Parse tree:
{
"type": "stylesheet",
"stylesheet": {
"rules": [
{
"type": "rule",
"selectors": [
"body"
],
"declarations": [
{
"type": "declaration",
"property": "background",
"value": "#eee",
"position": {
"start": {
"line": 2,
"column": 3
},
"end": {
"line": 2,
"column": 19
}
}
},
{
"type": "declaration",
"property": "color",
"value": "#888",
"position": {
"start": {
"line": 3,
"column": 3
},
"end": {
"line": 3,
"column": 14
}
}
}
],
"position": {
"start": {
"line": 1,
"column": 1
},
"end": {
"line": 4,
"column": 2
}
}
}
]
}
}
MIT
FAQs
A JavaScript library providing an easy to use api for interacting with iOS and Android platform APIs.
We found that @akylas/nativescript demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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