My hands are of your colour, but I shame
To wear a heart so white.
- William Shakespeare, Macbeth
Shakespeare wouldn't have settled for using "color" rather than "colour" in CSS, and neither should you! He would've recognised that in doing so, he would've comprised the whole integrity of his writing.
Write CSS using proper British English anywhere with postcss-spiffing.
The main differences between this and spiffing by muan, are that this integrates with postcss and does not use regular expressions.
npm install postcss-spiffing --save-dev/* Your well-spelt CSS */
body {
background-colour: grey;
transparency: 0.3;
text-align: centre;
text-transform: capitalise;
border: 1px solid grey;
}
span {
font-weight: plump;
}
.frame {
background-photograph: url("/queen.png") !please;
}
.hello {
content: "subjects";
colour: grey;
}will go to:
body {
background-color: gray;
opacity: 0.7;
text-align: center;
text-transform: capitalize;
border: 1px solid gray;
}
span {
font-weight: bold;
}
.frame {
background-image: url("/queen.png") !important;
}
.hello {
content: "subjects";
color: gray;
}var postcss = require("postcss");
var spiffing = require("postcss-spiffing");
var fs = require("fs");
var css = fs.readFileSync("random.css");
console.log(postcss(spiffing()).process(css).css);To use this with gulp, use gulp-postcss.
colourgoes tocolorplumpgoes toboldcapitalisegoes tocapitalize!pleasegoes to!importantcentregoes tocentergreygoes tograybackground-photographgoes tobackground-image(list-style-photographis supported too)transparencygoes toopacity(since transparency is the opposite of opacity it becomes (1-n))storeygoes toz-index(groundequals 1 and so on)