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cssauron-noeval
Advanced tools
create matching selectors from css for your very own nested object hierarchy without eval
build a matching function in CSS for any nested object structure without eval
const language = require('cssauron-noeval')({
tag: 'tagName'
, contents: 'innerText'
, id: 'id'
, class: 'className'
, parent: 'parentNode'
, children: 'childNodes'
, attr: 'getAttribute(attr)'
})
const selector = language('body > #header .logo')
, element = document.getElementsByClassName('logo')[0]
if(selector(element)) {
// element matches selector
} else {
// element does not match selector
}
Import cssauron-noeval
and configure it for the nested object structure against that you
want to match.
options
are an object hash of lookup type to string attribute or function(node)
lookups for queried
nodes. You only need to provide the configuration necessary for the selectors you're planning on creating.
(If you're not going to use #id
lookups, there's no need to provide the id
lookup in your options.)
tag
: Extract tag information from a node for div
style selectors.contents
: Extract text information from a node, for :contains(xxx)
selectors.id
: Extract id for #my_sweet_id
selectors.class
: .class_name
parent
: Used to traverse up from the current node, for composite selectors body #wrapper
, body > #wrapper
.children
: Used to traverse from a parent to its children for sibling selectors div + span
, a ~ p
.attr
: Used to extract attribute information, for [attr=thing]
style selectors.Compiles a matching function.
Returns false if the provided node does not match the selector. Returns truthy if the provided node does match. Exact return value is determined by the selector, based on the CSS4 subject selector spec: if only a single node is matched, only that node is returned. If multiple subjects are matched, a deduplicated array of those subjects are returned.
For example, given the following HTML (and cssauron-html
):
<div id="gary-busey">
<p>
<span class="jake-busey">
</span>
</p>
</div>
Checking the following selectors against the span.jake-busey
element yields:
#gary-busey
: false
, no match.#gary-busey *
: span.jake-busey
, a single match.!#gary-busey *
: div#gary-busey
, a single match using the !
subject selector.#gary-busey *, p span
: span.jake-busey
, a single match, though both selectors match.#gary-busey !* !*, !p > !span
: [p, span.jake-busey]
, two matches.:first-child
:last-child
:nth-child
:empty
:root
:contains(text)
:any(selector, selector, selector)
[attr=value]
: Exact match[attr]
: Attribute exists and is not false-y.[attr$=value]
: Attribute ends with value[attr^=value]
: Attribute starts with value[attr*=value]
: Attribute contains value[attr~=value]
: Attribute, split by whitespace, contains value.[attr|=value]
: Attribute, split by -
, contains value.FAQs
create matching selectors from css for your very own nested object hierarchy without eval
The npm package cssauron-noeval receives a total of 0 weekly downloads. As such, cssauron-noeval popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that cssauron-noeval demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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