@lwc/style-compiler
Transform style sheet to be consumed by the LWC engine.
Features
- Shadow DOM style scoping:
- transform
:host
pseudo-class selectors - scope all the other selectors using CSS attribute selectors
- Custom Properties: inline replacement of
var()
CSS function - Right-to-left: transform the
:dir
pseudo class selector to [dir]
attribute selectors - CSS import: resolve imports via static ES module imports
Installation
yarn add --dev @lwc/style-compiler
Usage
const { transform } = require('@lwc/style-compiler');
const source = `
:host {
opacity: 0.4;
}
span {
text-transform: uppercase;
}
`;
const { code } = transform(source, 'example.css');
API
transform(source, id, options)
Options:
source
(string, required) - the css source file to compilerid
(string, required) - the css source file path, used by the compiler to produce errors with the file nameoptions
(object, optional)
customProperties
(object, optional)
resolverModule
(boolean, optional) - module name for the custom properties resolve
scoped
(boolean, optional) - true if the styles are scoped (via Light DOM style scoping)disableSyntheticShadowSupport
(boolean, optional) - true if synthetic shadow DOM support is not needed, which can result in smaller outputapiVersion
(number, optional) - API version to associate with the compiled stylesheet.
Return:
code
- the generated code
Note: The LWC style compiler doesn't preserve the authored format, and always produce compressed code.
Selector scoping caveats
- No support for
::slotted
pseudo-element. - No support for
>>>
deep combinator (spec still under consideration: issue). - No support for
:host-context
pseudo-selector (browser vendors are not able to agree: webkit, gecko) - This transform duplicates the
:host
selector to able to use the generated style in both the synthetic and native shadow DOM. The duplication is necessary to support the functional form of :host()
, :host(.foo, .bar) {}
needs to get transformed into .foo[x-btn-host], .bar[x-btn-host] {}
to work in the synthetic shadow DOM. - Scoped CSS has a non-negligeable performance impact:
- Each selector chain is scoped and each compound expression passed to the
:host()
need to be spread into multiple selectors. This transformation greatly increases the overall size and complexity of the generated CSS, leading to more bits on the wire, longer parsing time and longer style recalculation. - In order to ensure CSS encapsulation, each element needs to add an extra attribute. This increases the actual rendering time.