PostCSS plugin to assign a css cascade layer to files based on a glob pattern
CSS Cascade Layers are a powerful new tool to give us more control over the cascade. A Complete Guide to CSS Cascade Layers is an excellent introduction that goes in depth into the details of how it works and the reasons you might want to use it.
One useful approach is to create different layers for defaults, components, and utilities, with increasing order of priority. So, components will always override a selector with the same specificity in the defaults layer, but utilities will override components. Defaults and utilities can be easily assigned up-front, in your global stylesheets imported at the root of your applicaiton. But you might have separate css files spread over your app for your components, especially if you're using an approach like css modules.
That's where this plugin comes in. By default, it will wrap the contents of each *.module.css
file into a components
layer (both the glob and the name of the layer can be changed). So, for example, given a css module file like:
/* component.module.css */
.foo {
color: rebeccapurple;
}
.bar {
color: blanchedalmond;
}
The end result will be:
/* component.module.css */
@layer components {
.foo {
color: rebeccapurple;
}
.bar {
color: blanchedalmond;
}
}
Now, you can be assured that your component css will be added to the correct layer!
npm install --save-dev postcss postcss-assign-layer
postcss.config.js
in the project root, "postcss"
section in package.json
or postcss
in bundle config.
If you do not use PostCSS, add it according to official docs and set this plugin in settings.
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
+ require('postcss-assign-layer')(/* Optional configuration */),
],
}
It's possible to configure the include glob and the layer name, and more than one set of rules can be provided.
module.exports = {
plugins: [
require('autoprefixer'),
+ require('postcss-assign-layer')([
+ {
+ include: '**/*.module.css',
+ layerName: 'components',
+ },
+ {
+ include: 'global/*.css',
+ layerName: 'base',
+ },
+ ]),
],
}
Default: "**/*.module.css"
A valid picomatch pattern, or array of patterns. Note that picomatch
patterns are very similar to minimatch patterns, and in most use cases, they are interchangeable. If you have more specific pattern matching needs, you can view this comparison table to learn more about where the libraries differ.
Default: 'components'
The layer name that will be used.