PostCSS Nesting
npm install postcss-nesting --save-dev
PostCSS Nesting lets you nest style rules inside each other, following the CSS Nesting specification.
If you want nested rules the same way Sass works
you might want to use PostCSS Nested instead.
.foo {
color: red;
&:hover {
color: green;
}
> .bar {
color: blue;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
color: cyan;
}
color: pink;
}
/* becomes */
.foo {
color: red;
color: pink;
}
.foo:hover {
color: green;
}
.foo > .bar {
color: blue;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
.foo {
color: cyan;
}
}
Usage
Add PostCSS Nesting to your project:
npm install postcss postcss-nesting --save-dev
Use it as a PostCSS plugin:
const postcss = require('postcss');
const postcssNesting = require('postcss-nesting');
postcss([
postcssNesting()
]).process(YOUR_CSS );
PostCSS Nesting runs in all Node environments, with special
instructions for:
⚠️ @nest
has been removed from the specification.
Previous iterations of the CSS Nesting specification required using @nest
for certain selectors.
@nest
was removed from the specification completely.
Future versions of this plugin will error if you use @nest
.
We advice everyone to migrate their codebase now to nested CSS without @nest
.
We published a Stylelint Plugin to help you migrate.
example warning:
@nest
was removed from the CSS Nesting specification and will be removed from PostCSS Nesting in the next major version.
Change @nest foo & {}
to foo & {}
to migrate to the latest standard.
You can silence this warning with a new silenceAtNestWarning
plugin option.
postcssNesting({
silenceAtNestWarning: true
})
Options
edition
The default behavior is to transpile CSS following an older version of the CSS nesting specification.
If you want to already use the latest version you can set the edition
option to 2024-02
.
postcssNesting({
edition: '2024-02'
})
2021
(default)
This version is a continuation of what existed before CSS nesting was implemented in browsers.
It made a few non-invasive changes to keep up with implementations but it is falling behind.
In a future version of this plugin this will no longer be the default.
.foo {
color: red;
&:hover {
color: green;
}
> .bar {
color: blue;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
color: cyan;
}
color: pink;
}
/* becomes */
.foo {
color: red;
color: pink;
}
.foo:hover {
color: green;
}
.foo > .bar {
color: blue;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
.foo {
color: cyan;
}
}
2024-02
- usage of
:is()
pseudo-class is no longer optional - at rules are not combined with the
and
keyword @nest
is removed from the specification- declarations and nested rules/at-rules are no longer re-ordered
.foo {
color: red;
&:hover {
color: green;
}
> .bar {
color: blue;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
color: cyan;
}
color: pink;
}
/* becomes */
.foo {
color: red;
}
.foo:hover {
color: green;
}
.foo > .bar {
color: blue;
}
@media (prefers-color-scheme: dark) {
.foo {
color: cyan;
}
}
.foo {
color: pink;
}
noIsPseudoSelector
Specificity
Before :
#alpha,
.beta {
&:hover {
order: 1;
}
}
After without the option :
postcssNesting()
:is(#alpha,.beta):hover {
order: 1;
}
.beta:hover
has specificity as if .beta
where an id selector, matching the specification.
specificity: 1, 1, 0
After with the option :
postcssNesting({
noIsPseudoSelector: true
})
#alpha:hover, .beta:hover {
order: 1;
}
.beta:hover
has specificity as if .beta
where a class selector, conflicting with the specification.
specificity: 0, 2, 0
Complex selectors
Before :
.alpha > .beta {
& + & {
order: 2;
}
}
After without the option :
postcssNesting()
:is(.alpha > .beta) + :is(.alpha > .beta) {
order: 2;
}
After with the option :
postcssNesting({
noIsPseudoSelector: true
})
.alpha > .beta + .alpha > .beta {
order: 2;
}
this is a different selector than expected as .beta + .alpha
matches .beta
followed by .alpha
.
avoid these cases when you disable :is()
writing the selector without nesting is advised here
.alpha > .beta + .beta {
order: 2;
}