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namespaced

v1.0.1

Published

Namespace your css class names easily

Readme

namespaced

Create namespaced css class names.

Install

$ npm install namespaced

Usage

Use a colon to denote a local class name. The colon is replaced by the given namespace and a hyphen. The constructs are:

  • local names, e.g. :foo, to which the namespace is prepended.
  • global names, e.g. bar, which are not altered
  • arrays of class names, e.g. [:foo, bar]
  • functions, whose return value are namespaced
  • objects, whose member values are recursively handled according to the rules

Only strings are accepted as class names. The following values are silently discarded: null, undefined, false, true.

See examples below.

One-liners

namespaced('my', ':local')              // 'my-local'
namespaced('my', ':local', 'global')    // 'my-local global'
namespaced('my', [':local', 'global'])  // 'my-local global'

Curried

var css = namespaced('my')
css(':bar')                                 // 'my-bar'
css(':bar', 'zot')                          // 'my-bar zot'
css([':bar', 'zot'])                        // 'my-bar zot'
css(null && ':bar')                         // ''
css(false || ':bar')                        // 'my-bar'
css('foo', true && ':bar', false && ':zot') // 'foo my-bar'

A styles object

var styles = namespaced('my', {
  foo: ':foo',                                         // 'my-foo'
  bar: 'bar',                                          // 'bar'
  zot: [':zot', 'bar', false && ':foo'],               // 'my-zot bar'
  qux: 'bar :foo :zot',                                // 'bar my-foo my-zot'
  nested: {
    stuff: ['bar', ':stuff']                           // 'bar my-stuff'
  },
  fun: function(o) { return ':important-' + o.key; }
});

styles.foo               // 'my-foo'
styles.nested.stuff      // 'bar my-stuff'
styles.fun({key: 'foo'}) // 'my-important-foo'

Details

More specifically, if there is just one argument, a function is returned. If more than one argument is given, the remaining arguments are evaluated as rules.

Here's a BNF-ish specification of what is possible:

rules       := [rule*]
rule        := simple-rule | object | function | rules
simple-rule := local-name | global-name
local-name  := ':' classname
global-name := classname

Where object is an object whose member's values are rules and function is a function that returns a rule.

License

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISC_license