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postcss-double-position-gradients

v5.0.6

Published

Use double-position gradients in CSS

Downloads

25,418,580

Readme

PostCSS Double Position Gradients

PostCSS Double Position Gradients lets you use double-position gradients in CSS, following the CSS Image Values and Replaced Content specification.

.linear-gradient {
  background-image: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25% 50%, blue 50% 75%);
}

.conic-gradient {
  background-image: conic-gradient(yellowgreen 40%, gold 0deg 75%, #f06 0deg);
}

/* becomes */

.linear-gradient {
  background-image: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25%, black 50%, blue 50%, blue 75%);
  background-image: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25% 50%, blue 50% 75%);
}

.conic-gradient {
  background-image: conic-gradient(yellowgreen 40%, gold 0deg, gold 75%, #f06 0deg);
  background-image: conic-gradient(yellowgreen 40%, gold 0deg 75%, #f06 0deg);
}

Usage

Add PostCSS Double Position Gradients to your project:

npm install postcss-double-position-gradients --save-dev

Use PostCSS Double Position Gradients to process your CSS:

const postcssDoublePositionGradients = require('postcss-double-position-gradients');

postcssDoublePositionGradients.process(YOUR_CSS /*, processOptions, pluginOptions */);

Or use it as a PostCSS plugin:

const postcss = require('postcss');
const postcssDoublePositionGradients = require('postcss-double-position-gradients');

postcss([
  postcssDoublePositionGradients(/* pluginOptions */)
]).process(YOUR_CSS /*, processOptions */);

PostCSS Double Position Gradients runs in all Node environments, with special instructions for:

| Node | PostCSS CLI | Webpack | Gulp | Grunt | | --- | --- | --- | --- | --- |

Options

preserve

The preserve option determines whether the original double-position gradients should be preserved. By default, double-position gradients are preserved.

postcssDoublePositionGradients({ preserve: false })
.linear-gradient {
  background-image: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25% 50%, blue 50% 75%);
}

.conic-gradient {
  background-image: conic-gradient(yellowgreen 40%, gold 0deg 75%, #f06 0deg);
}

/* becomes */

.linear-gradient {
  background-image: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25%, black 50%, blue 50%, blue 75%);
}

.conic-gradient {
  background-image: conic-gradient(yellowgreen 40%, gold 0deg, gold 75%, #f06 0deg);
}

enableProgressiveCustomProperties

The enableProgressiveCustomProperties option determines whether the original notation is wrapped with @supports when used in Custom Properties. By default, it is enabled.

[!NOTE] We only recommend disabling this when you set preserve to false or if you bring your own fix for Custom Properties.
See what the plugin does in its README.

postcssDoublePositionGradients({ enableProgressiveCustomProperties: false })
:root {
	--a-gradient: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25% 50%, blue 50% 75%);
}

/* becomes */

:root {
	--a-gradient: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25%, black 50%, blue 50%, blue 75%); /* will never be used, not even in older browser */
	--a-gradient: linear-gradient(90deg, black 25% 50%, blue 50% 75%);
}