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@ryannhg/css-in-elm

v1.0.0

Published

Generate an Elm module for your CSS files.

Readme

@ryannhg/css-in-elm

Write normal CSS, then generate an Elm module with all your class names.

Installation

npm install -g @ryannhg/css-in-elm

Usage

Build command

Generates an .elm file once, then exits

# css-in-elm build <input> <output>
css-in-elm build main.css dist/Css.elm

Watch command

Generates an .elm file once, then listens for changes in the input file, rerunning as edits come in!

# css-in-elm watch <input> <output>
css-in-elm watch main.css dist/Css.elm

How it works

  1. Your CSS file is parsed into a list of class names

    .row {
      display: flex;
    }
    
    .gap-sm { gap: 0.5rem; }
    .gap-md { gap: 1rem; }
    .gap-lg { gap: 2rem; }
    [ "row", "gap-sm", "gap-md", "gap-lg" ]
  2. Those classnames become functions in a generated Elm module

    -- 🤖 Generated by @ryannhg/css-in-elm ✨ --
    
    
    module Css exposing (row, gap_sm, gap_md, gap_lg)
    
    import Html
    import Html.Attributes
    
    
    row : Html.Attribute msg
    row =
        Html.Attributes.class "row"
    
    
    gap_sm : Html.Attribute msg
    gap_sm =
        Html.Attributes.class "gap-sm"
    
    -- ...
    
  3. You can import those generated functions instead of using String values directly.

    -- BEFORE
    import Html exposing (..)
    import Html.Attributes exposing (class)
    
    main =
        div [ class "row gap-lg" ] [ text "Hello!" ]
    -- AFTER
    import Css exposing (..)
    import Html exposing (..)
    
    main =
        div [ row, gap_lg ] [ text "Hello!" ]
  4. If you delete a CSS class later, the Elm compiler will remind you to remove the usage.

    -- NAMING ERROR --------------------------------------- src/Main.elm
    
    I cannot find a `gap_lg` variable:
    
    5|     div [ row, gap_lg ] [ text "Hello!" ]
                      ^^^^^^
    These names seem close though:
    
        gap_md
        gap_sm
        label
        map
    
    Hint: Read <https://elm-lang.org/0.19.1/imports> to see how `import`
    declarations work in Elm.