PostCSS plugin to sort rules content with specified order. Heavily inspired by CSSComb.
Also available as Sublime Text plugin, Atom plugin, and VS Code plugin.
- Plugin is sorting content for rules and at-rules.
- Sorting nested rules.
- Sorting at-rules, also by at-rule name and parameter.
- Sorting variables.
- Grouping content.
- Support CSS, SCSS (if postcss-scss parser is used), PreCSS and most likely any other syntax added by other PostCSS plugins.
$ npm install postcss-sorting{
"sort-order": "default",
"empty-lines-between-children-rules": 0,
"empty-lines-between-media-rules": 0
}Set sort order. If no order is set, the plugin uses default config.
Note: Use one of predefined configs as an example.
Acceptable values:
{Array}of rules;{Array}of arrays of rules for groups separation;{String}with the name of predefined config.
Example: { "sort-order": [ "margin", "padding" ] }
/* before */
p {
padding: 0;
margin: 0;
}
/* after */
p {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}Prefixed properties may not be in sort order. Plugin will look for unprefixed property and if it find one it will use that property order for the prefixed property. It would be better not to write prefixed properties in CSS at all and delegate this job to Autoprefixer.
Example: { "sort-order": [ "position", "-webkit-box-sizing", "box-sizing", "width" ] }
/* before */
div {
-moz-box-sizing: border-box;
width: 100%;
box-sizing: border-box;
position: absolute;
-webkit-box-sizing: border-box;
}
/* after */
div {
position: absolute;
-webkit-box-sizing: border-box;
-moz-box-sizing: border-box;
box-sizing: border-box;
width: 100%;
}Using an array of arrays for sort-order separate content into groups by an empty line.
Example: { "sort-order": [ [ "margin", "padding" ], [ "border", "background" ] ] }
/* before */
p {
background: none;
border: 0;
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
}
/* after */
p {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
border: 0;
background: none;
}Any @at-rule inside another rule can be sorted. There is some keywords:
@atrule— any at-rule.@atrulename— any at-rule with a specific name. Ex.,@mediaor@mixin.@atrulename parameter— any at-rule with specific name and parameter. Ex.,@mixin clearfix.
Example: { "sort-order": ["@atrule", "@mixin", "border", "@some-rule hello", "@mixin clearfix"] }
/* before */
.block {
@some-rule hello;
border: none;
@mixin clearfix;
@media (min-width: 100px) {
display: none;
}
@mixin island;
}
/* after */
.block {
@media (min-width: 100px) {
display: none;
}
@mixin island;
border: none;
@some-rule hello;
@mixin clearfix;
}>child keyword for nested rules.
Example: { "sort-order": [ ["position", "top", "width"], ['>child'] ] }
/* before */
.block {
position: absolute;
span {
display: inline-block;
}
width: 50%;
&__element {
display: none;
}
top: 0;
}
/* after */
.block {
position: absolute;
top: 0;
width: 50%;
span {
display: inline-block;
}
&__element {
display: none;
}
}$variable keyword is using to sort variables like $size.
Example: { "sort-order": [ ["$variable"], ["position", "top", "width", "height"] ] }
/* before */
.block {
position: absolute;
$width: 10px;
top: 0;
$height: 20px;
height: $height;
width: $width;
}
/* after */
.block {
$width: 10px;
$height: 20px;
position: absolute;
top: 0;
width: $width;
height: $height;
}When there are properties that are not mentioned in the sort-order option, they are inserted after all the sorted properties in the new group in the same order they were in the source stylesheet.
You can override this by using a “leftovers” token: ... — just place it either in its own group or near other properties in any other group and CSSComb would place all the properties that were not sorted where the ... was in sort-order.
So, with this value:
{
"sort-order": [
["$variable"],
["position"],
["...", "border"],
["@mixin"],
["font"]
]
}everything would go into five groups: variables, then group with position, then group containing all the leftovers plus the border, then group with all mixins and then the font.
PostCSS Sorting have predefined configs:
defaultzencsscombyandex
Example: { "sort-order": "zen" }
Set a number of empty lines between nested children rules. By default there is no empty lines between >child rules.
Acceptable value: {Number} of empty lines
Example: { "empty-lines-between-children-rules": 1, "sort-order": [ ["..."], [">child"] ] }
/* before */
.block {
position: absolute;
span {
display: inline-block;
}
&__element {
display: none;
}
&:hover {
top: 0;
}
}
/* after */
.block {
position: absolute;
span {
display: inline-block;
}
&__element {
display: none;
}
&:hover {
top: 0;
}
}Set a number of empty lines between nested media rules. By default there is no empty lines between @media rules.
Acceptable value: {Number} of empty lines
Example: { "empty-lines-between-media-rules": 1, "sort-order": ["@media"] }
/* before */
.block {
@media (min-width: 1px) {}
@media (min-width: 2px) {}
@media (min-width: 3px) {}
}
/* after */
.block {
@media (min-width: 1px) {}
@media (min-width: 2px) {}
@media (min-width: 3px) {}
}If you used to use custom sorting order in CSSComb you can easily use this sorting order in PostCSS Sorting. sort-order option in this plugin is compatible with sort-order in CSSComb. Just copy sort-order value from CSSComb config to PostCSS Sorting config.
See PostCSS docs for examples for your environment.
This plugin available as Sublime Text plugin, Atom plugin, and VS Code plugin.
Add Gulp PostCSS and PostCSS Sorting to your build tool:
npm install gulp-postcss postcss-sorting --save-devEnable PostCSS Sorting within your Gulpfile:
var postcss = require('gulp-postcss');
var sorting = require('postcss-sorting');
gulp.task('css', function () {
return gulp.src('./css/src/*.css').pipe(
postcss([
sorting({ /* options */ })
])
).pipe(
gulp.dest('./css')
);
});Add Grunt PostCSS and PostCSS Sorting to your build tool:
npm install grunt-postcss postcss-sorting --save-devEnable PostCSS Sorting within your Gruntfile:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-postcss');
grunt.initConfig({
postcss: {
options: {
processors: [
require('postcss-sorting')({ /* options */ })
]
},
dist: {
src: 'css/*.css'
}
}
});If you want format stylesheets, use perfectionist or stylefmt, also a PostCSS-based tool.
Don't forget to lint stylesheets with stylelint!
This plugin is heavily inspired by CSSComb. Some code logic, tests, and documentation parts are taken from this tool.