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browserslist
Advanced tools
Share browsers list between different front-end tools, like Autoprefixer, Stylelint and babel-env-preset
The browserslist npm package is used to share target browsers and Node.js versions between different front-end tools, like Autoprefixer, Babel, and others. It utilizes a configuration file or package.json entries to specify the range of browser versions that your project supports. It helps in making decisions for transpiling JavaScript, adding vendor prefixes to CSS, and even defining which browser versions to test during the development process.
Defining target browsers
This feature allows you to define a range of browsers your project supports by specifying queries like market share, last versions, or excluding certain browsers. The code sample would typically be placed in a package.json file.
"browserslist": ["> 1%", "last 2 versions", "not dead"]
Integration with build tools
Browserslist can be integrated with build tools like Webpack, Babel, or PostCSS to automatically apply browser-specific transformations based on the defined browser support criteria.
const browserslist = require('browserslist');
const supportedBrowsers = browserslist('> 0.5%, last 2 versions, Firefox ESR, not dead');
CLI Usage
Browserslist provides a command-line interface (CLI) that can be used to check which browsers and versions are selected by your queries.
npx browserslist "> 1%, last 2 versions"
Configuring environments
You can define different sets of browsers for various environments, like production or development, within a .browserslistrc file.
[production]
> 1% in US
[development]
last 1 chrome version
The caniuse-api provides raw browser support data from Can I Use, which is similar to the data that browserslist uses. However, it focuses more on querying specific features for browser support rather than defining a list of supported browsers for a project.
Autoprefixer is a CSS post-processor that uses browserslist to add vendor prefixes to CSS rules. It is a consumer of browserslist data rather than a direct alternative, but it serves a similar purpose in terms of browser compatibility.
Babel's preset-env is a smart preset that allows you to use the latest JavaScript without needing to micromanage which syntax transforms are needed by your target environment. It uses browserslist to determine which features need to be transformed or polyfilled. While not a direct alternative, it shares the goal of adapting code to be compatible with different environments.
Library to share supported browsers list between different front-end tools. It is used in Autoprefixer, Stylelint, eslint-plugin-compat and babel-env-preset.
All tools that rely on Browserslist will find its config automatically,
when you add the following to package.json
:
{
"browserslist": [
"> 1%",
"last 2 versions"
]
}
Or in browserslist
config:
# Browsers that we support
> 1%
Last 2 versions
IE 10 # sorry
Developers set browsers list in queries like last 2 version
to be free from updating browser versions manually.
Browserslist will use Can i Use data for this queries.
Browserslist will take browsers queries from tool option,
browserslist
config, browserslist
section in package.json
or environment variables.
You can test Browserslist queries in online demo.
Browserslist will use browsers query from one of this sources:
browsers
option in Autoprefixer.BROWSERSLIST
environment variable.browserslist
config file in current or parent directories.browserslist
key in package.json
file in current or parent directories.> 1%, last 2 versions, Firefox ESR
.We recommends to write queries in browserslist
config or package.json
.
You can specify the versions by queries (case insensitive):
last 2 versions
: the last 2 versions for each major browser.last 2 Chrome versions
: the last 2 versions of Chrome browser.> 5%
: versions selected by global usage statistics.> 5% in US
: uses USA usage statistics. It accepts two-letter country code.> 5% in my stats
: uses custom usage data.ie 6-8
: selects an inclusive range of versions.Firefox > 20
: versions of Firefox newer than 20.Firefox >= 20
: versions of Firefox newer than or equal to 20.Firefox < 20
: versions of Firefox less than 20.Firefox <= 20
: versions of Firefox less than or equal to 20.Firefox ESR
: the latest [Firefox ESR] version.iOS 7
: the iOS browser version 7 directly.not ie <= 8
: exclude browsers selected before by previous queries.
You can add not
to any query.Browserslist works with separated versions of browsers.
You should avoid queries like Firefox > 0
.
Multiple criteria are combined as a boolean OR
. A browser version must match
at least one of the criteria to be selected.
All queries are based on the Can I Use support table,
e.g. last 3 iOS versions
might select 8.4, 9.2, 9.3
(mixed major and minor),
whereas last 3 Chrome versions
might select 50, 49, 48
(major only).
Names are case insensitive:
Chrome
for Google Chrome.Firefox
or ff
for Mozilla Firefox.Explorer
or ie
for Internet Explorer.Edge
for Microsoft Edge.iOS
or ios_saf
for iOS Safari.Opera
for Opera.Safari
for desktop Safari.ExplorerMobile
or ie_mob
for Internet Explorer Mobile.Android
for Android WebView.BlackBerry
or bb
for Blackberry browser.ChromeAndroid
or and_chr
for Chrome for Android
(in Other section, because mostly same as common Chrome
).FirefoxAndroid
or and_ff
for Firefox for Android.OperaMobile
or op_mob
for Opera Mobile.OperaMini
or op_mini
for Opera Mini.Samsung
for Samsung Internet.UCAndroid
or and_uc
for UC Browser for Android.Electron
for Electron framework. It will be converted to Chrome version.electron-to-chromium
could return a compatible Browserslist query
for your (major) Electron version:
const e2c = require('electron-to-chromium')
autoprefixer({
browsers: e2c.electronToBrowserList('1.4') //=> "Chrome >= 53"
})
Browserslist config should be named browserslist
and have browsers queries
split by a new line. Comments starts with #
symbol:
# Browsers that we support
> 1%
Last 2 versions
IE 8 # sorry
Browserslist will check config in every directory in path
.
So, if tool process app/styles/main.css
, you can put config to root,
app/
or app/styles
.
You can specify direct path in BROWSERSLIST_CONFIG
environment variables.
package.json
If you want to reduce config files in project root, you can specify
browsers in package.json
with browserslist
key:
{
"private": true,
"dependencies": {
"autoprefixer": "^6.5.4"
},
"browserslist": [
"> 1%",
"last 2 versions"
]
}
You can also specify different browser queries for various environments.
Browserslist will choose query according to BROWSERSLIST_ENV
or NODE_ENV
variables. If none of them is declared, Browserslist will firstly look
for development
queries and then use defaults.
In package.json
:
{
…
"browserslist": {
"production": [
"last 2 version",
"ie 9"
],
"development": [
"last 1 version"
]
}
}
In browserslist
config:
[production]
last 2 version
ie 9
[development]
last 1 version
If some tool use Browserslist inside, you can change browsers settings by environment variables:
BROWSERSLIST
with browsers queries.
BROWSERSLIST="> 5%" gulp css
BROWSERSLIST_CONFIG
with path to config file.
BROWSERSLIST_CONFIG=./config/browserslist gulp css
BROWSERSLIST_ENV
with environments string.
BROWSERSLIST_ENV="development" gulp css
BROWSERSLIST_STATS
with path to the custom usage data
for > 1% in my stats
query.
BROWSERSLIST_STATS=./config/usage_data.json gulp css
If you have a website, you can query against the usage statistics of your site:
Import your Google Analytics data into Can I Use.
Press Import…
button in Settings page.
Open browser DevTools on Can I Use and paste this snippet into the browser console:
var e=document.createElement('a');e.setAttribute('href', 'data:text/plain;charset=utf-8,'+encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify(JSON.parse(localStorage['usage-data-by-id'])[localStorage['config-primary_usage']])));e.setAttribute('download','stats.json');document.body.appendChild(e);e.click();document.body.removeChild(e);
Save the data to a browserslist-stats.json
file in your project.
Of course, you can generate usage statistics file by any other method. File format should be like:
{
"ie": {
"6": 0.01,
"7": 0.4,
"8": 1.5
},
"chrome": {
…
},
…
}
Note that you can query against your custom usage data
while also querying against global or regional data.
For example, the query > 1% in my stats, > 5% in US, 10%
is permitted.
var browserslist = require('browserslist');
// Your CSS/JS build tool code
var process = function (source, opts) {
var browsers = browserslist(opts.browsers, {
stats: opts.stats,
path: opts.file,
env: opts.env
});
// Your code to add features for selected browsers
}
Queries can be a string "> 5%, last 1 version"
or an array ['> 5%', 'last 1 version']
.
If a query is missing, Browserslist will look for a config file.
You can provide a path
option (that can be a file) to find the config file
relatively to it.
For non-JS environment and debug purpose you can use CLI tool:
browserslist "> 1%, last 2 versions"
You can get total users coverage for selected browsers by JS API:
browserslist.coverage(browserslist('> 1%')) //=> 81.4
browserslist.coverage(browserslist('> 1% in US'), 'US') //=> 83.1
Or by CLI:
$ browserslist --coverage "> 1%"
These browsers account for 81.4% of all users globally
$ browserslist --coverage=US "> 1% in US"
These browsers account for 83.1% of all users in the US
1.7.2
FAQs
Share target browsers between different front-end tools, like Autoprefixer, Stylelint and babel-env-preset
The npm package browserslist receives a total of 40,724,417 weekly downloads. As such, browserslist popularity was classified as popular.
We found that browserslist demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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