~alcinnz/haskell-stylist

ref: b24d4208e42ee25d3cc3da713b75590eadedf94f haskell-stylist/README.md -rw-r--r-- 2.5 KiB
b24d4208 — Adrian Cochrane Optimize: use HashMap.Lazy for cascade. 4 years ago
                                                                                
4a1689df Adrian Cochrane
22d07de9 Adrian Cochrane
ceb3b528 Adrian Cochrane
3cd5b4ad Adrian Cochrane
0f4220e2 Adrian Cochrane
ceb3b528 Adrian Cochrane
0f4220e2 Adrian Cochrane
ceb3b528 Adrian Cochrane
af858796 Adrian Cochrane
dd6765e1 Adrian Cochrane
af858796 Adrian Cochrane
47fcc451 Adrian Cochrane
4a1689df Adrian Cochrane
9503b788 Adrian Cochrane
4a1689df Adrian Cochrane
9503b788 Adrian Cochrane
835be299 Adrian Cochrane
9503b788 Adrian Cochrane
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
# Haskell Stylist
Generic CSS style engine for Haskell, intended to aid the development of new browser engines.

Stylish Haskell implements CSS selection and cascade (but not inheritance) independant of the CSS at-rules and properties understood by the caller. It is intended to ease the development of new browser engines, independant of their output targets.

For more interesting projects see: https://github.io/alcinnz/browser-engine-ganarchy/

## Versioning
The second major number indicates that more of CSS has been implemented within the existing API. Until then the error recovery rules will ensure as yet invalid CSS won't have any effect.

The first major number indicates any other change to the API, and might break your code.

## API
To parse a CSS stylesheet call `Data.CSS.Syntax.StyleSheet.parse` which returns a variant of the passed in `StyleSheet`. `StyleSheet` is a typeclass specifying methods for parsing at-rules (`parseAtRule`), storing parsed style rules (`addRule`), and optionally setting the stylesheet's priority (`setPriority`).

If these ultimately call down into a `Data.CSS.Syntax.Style.QueryableStyleSheet` you can call `queryRules` to find all matching style rules organized by psuedoelement. Once you have these style rules (typically by specifying a psuedoelement) you can call `cascade'` to resolve them into any instance of `PropertyParser`. To query rules not targetting a psuedoelement, you can either lookup the "" psuedoelement or use the `cascade` shorthand.

`PropertyParser` allows to declaratively (via Haskell pattern matching) specify how to parse CSS properties, and how they're impacted by CSS inheritance. It has four methods: `longhand` and `shorthand` specify how to parse CSS properties, whilst `temp` and `inherit` specifies what the default values should be.

## Contributing
You can contributed code or register "issues" to Haskell Stylist by contacting me (Adrian Cochrane) via [mastodon](https://floss.social/@alcinnz/) or [email](mailto:adrian@openwork.nz)..

If you're contributing code you can link me to where you're hosting your git fork, or send [a patch file](https://git-send-email.io/). Or if you simply want to ask for more features or fixes don't hesitate to contact me!

Feel free to mirror this repo elsewhere! Just tell me about it so I can watch that mirror for contributions.

### Building
1. Install `ghc` and `cabal-install`. (Debian package names listed here)
2. From within the git repository, run `cabal install`. This'll compile Stylist and all it's other dependencies.
3. Run `cabal test` after every change you make.