
A PostCSS plugin which prepends a selector to CSS styles to constrain their effect on parent
elements in a page.
Supports | Versions |
---|
NodeJS | v18 , v19 , v20 , v21 |
PostCSS | v7 , v8 |
⚠️ PostCSS v7 support is no longer validated in automated test cases, and will be removed entirely in a future release.
How to use this plugin?
⚠️ These instructions are only for this plugin. See the PostCSS website for framework information.
Install
Package Manager | Command |
---|
NPM | npm install postcss-prefixwrap --save-dev --save-exact |
PNPM | pnpm add postcss-prefixwrap --save-dev --save-exact |
Yarn | yarn add postcss-prefixwrap --dev --exact |
Configure
Add to your PostCSS configuration.
const PostCSS = require("gulp-postcss");
const PrefixWrap = require("postcss-prefixwrap");
PostCSS([PrefixWrap(".my-custom-wrap")]);
Container
Add the container to your markup.
<div class="my-custom-wrap"></div>
View
View your CSS, now prefix-wrapped.
Before
p {
color: red;
}
body {
font-size: 16px;
}
After
.my-custom-wrap p {
color: red;
}
.my-custom-wrap {
font-size: 16px;
}
What options does it have?
Minimal
The minimal required configuration is the prefix selector, as shown in the above example.
PrefixWrap(".my-custom-wrap");
Ignored Selectors
You may want to exclude some selectors from being prefixed, this is enabled using the ignoredSelectors
option.
PrefixWrap(".my-custom-wrap", {
ignoredSelectors: [":root", "#my-id", /^\.some-(.+)$/],
});
Prefix Root Tags
You may want root tags, like body
and html
to be converted to classes, then prefixed, this is enabled using
the prefixRootTags
option.
PrefixWrap(".my-container", {
prefixRootTags: true,
});
With this option, a selector like html
will be converted to .my-container .html
, rather than the
default .my-container
.
File Whitelist
In certain scenarios, you may only want PrefixWrap()
to wrap certain CSS files. This is done using the whitelist
option.
⚠️ Please note that each item in the whitelist
is parsed as a regular expression. This will impact how file paths are matched when you need to support both Windows and Unix like operating systems which use different path separators.
PrefixWrap(".my-custom-wrap", {
whitelist: ["editor.css"],
});
File Blacklist
In certain scenarios, you may want PrefixWrap()
to exclude certain CSS files. This is done using the blacklist
option.
⚠️ Please note that each item in the blacklist
is parsed as a regular expression. This will impact how file paths are matched when you need to support both Windows and Unix like operating systems which use different path separators.
If whitelist
option is also included, blacklist
will be ignored.
PrefixWrap(".my-custom-wrap", {
blacklist: ["colours.css"],
});
Nesting
When writing nested css rules, and using a plugin like postcss-nested to compile them, you will want to ensure that the nested selectors are not prefixed. This is done by defining the nested
property and setting the value to the selector prefix being used to represent nesting, this is most likely going to be "&"
.
PrefixWrap(".my-custom-wrap", {
nested: "&",
});
As an example, in the following CSS that contains nested selectors.
.demo {
&--lite {
color: red;
}
}
❌ Without the nested
configuration option defined:
.my-custom-wrap .my-custom-wrap .demo--lite {
color: red;
}
✅ With the tested
configuration defined:
.my-custom-wrap .demo--lite {
color: red;
}
What problems can it solve?
PostCSS Prefix Wrap can be used to solve multiple different problems. The following articles give some concrete examples:
How to contribute?
Read our Contributing Guide to learn more about how to contribute to this project.
Is this project secure?
Read our Security Guide to learn how security is considered during the development and operation of this
plugin.
License
The MIT License is used by this project.