CSS compressor written in OCaml

Taddeus Kroes 94a36e404b Generated shorthands are now appended instead of prepended пре 11 година
.gitignore 6ee79d6b7b Cleanup пре 11 година
Makefile 68e19c1760 Implemented shorthand compression пре 11 година
README.md edae519848 Updated README пре 11 година
color.ml dcb1102ccf Added tiny rgba optimization пре 11 година
lexer.mll c6447bc5b0 'and' and 'or' keywords may now be directly adjacent a comment пре 11 година
main.ml 68e19c1760 Implemented shorthand compression пре 11 година
parse.ml 70f032a31d Lexer now correctly tracks line numbers + some general cleanup пре 11 година
parser.mly b3315224d6 Fixed bug in nary-operator flattening пре 11 година
shorthand.ml 94a36e404b Generated shorthands are now appended instead of prepended пре 11 година
stringify.ml 864add4049 Bugfix in @page minification пре 11 година
types.ml 5c4c7aa3c3 Cleanup пре 11 година
util.ml 68e19c1760 Implemented shorthand compression пре 11 година

README.md

mincss is an extendible CSS minifier written in OCaml. It contains a complete parser for the CSS3 language, along with consistent type definitions and a traversal utility function for use in transformation passes.

mincss is currently still in development, finished components are the parser, stringification (along with whitespace compression), and color compression. Rulset merging is partially documented below but currently unimplemented.

Features

  • Whitespace compression
  • Color compression
  • Creation of shorthand properties (e.g. font and background)
  • Ruleset merging (see below)
  • Command-line interface and web interface

Ruleset merging

Apart from simply writing the CSS in a shorter format (i.e. whitespace/color/shorthand compression), mincss attempts to restructure rule sets into a shorter variant. For example:

a { color: red }
p { color: red }

can be written much shorter as:

a, p { color: red }

Merging selectors is something that is done by the programmer in most cases, but the example above may occur when multiple different CSS files are merged into one, or when a large CSS file is structured in such a way that the definitions of a and p are far apart. A special case is when the same selector appears in different rulesets, which may happen when a framework stylesheet is merged with a page-specific stylesheet:

a {
    color: blue;
    font-weight: bold;
}

...

a {
    color: red;
}

This is merged into:

a {
    color: blue;
    font-weight: bold;
    color: red;
}

Because the color property is now overwritten in the same ruleset, the early definition is removed:

a {
    font-weight: bold;
    color: red;
}