5.2 KiB
Specificity Calculator
A JavaScript module for calculating and comparing the specificity of CSS selectors. The module is used on the Specificity Calculator website.
Specificity Calculator is built for CSS Selectors Level 3.
Specificity Calculator isn’t a CSS validator. If you enter invalid
selectors it will return incorrect results. For example, the negation
pseudo-class may only take a simple selector as an argument. Using a
psuedo-element or combinator as an argument for :not() is
invalid CSS so Specificity Calculator will return incorrect results.
Supported runtime environments
The module is provided in two formats: an ECMAScript (ES) module in
dist/specificity.mjs, and a Universal Module Definition
(UMD) in dist/specificity.js. This enables support for the
following runtime environments:
Browser
- Directly loaded ES module
- ES module in a precompiled script (using a bundler like Webpack or Rollup)
- Global variable
Node.js
- ES module
- CommonJS module
Browser usage as a directly loaded ES module
<script type="module">
import { calculate } from './specificity/dist/specificity.mjs';
calculate('ul#nav li.active a');
</script>Browser usage as an ES module in a precompiled script
Bundlers like Webpack and
Rollup import from the module field in
package.json, which is set to the ES module artefact,
dist/specificity.mjs.
import { calculate } from 'specificity';
calculate('ul#nav li.active a');Browser usage as a global variable
The UMD artefact, dist/specificity.js, sets a global
variable, SPECIFICITY.
<script src="./specificity/dist/specificity.js"></script>
<script>
SPECIFICITY.calculate('ul#nav li.active a');
</script>Node.js usage as an ES module
The main field in package.json has an
extensionless value, dist/specificity. This allows Node.js
to use either the ES module, in dist/specificity.mjs, or
the CommonJS module, in dist/specificity.js.
When Node.js is run with the --experimental-modules flag or an ES module loader, it will
use the ES module artefact.
import { calculate } from 'specificity';
calculate('ul#nav li.active a');Node.js usage as a CommonJS module
Otherwise, Node.js will use the UMD artefact, which contains a CommonJS module definition.
const { calculate } = require('specificity');
calculate('ul#nav li.active a');Calculate function
The calculate function returns an array containing a
result object for each selector input. Each result object has the
following properties:
selector: the inputspecificity: the result as a string e.g.0,1,0,0specificityArray: the result as an array of numbers e.g.[0, 1, 0, 0]parts: array with details about each part of the selector that counts towards the specificity
Example
calculate('ul#nav li.active a');
/*
[
{
selector: 'ul#nav li.active a',
specificity: '0,1,1,3',
specificityArray: [0, 1, 1, 3],
parts: [
{ selector: 'ul', type: 'c', index: 0, length: 2 },
{ selector: '#nav', type: 'a', index: 2, length: 4 },
{ selector: 'li', type: 'c', index: 5, length: 2 },
{ selector: '.active', type: 'b', index: 8, length: 7 },
{ selector: 'a', type: 'c', index: 13, length: 1 }
]
}
]
*/You can use comma separation to pass in multiple selectors:
calculate('ul#nav li.active a, body.ie7 .col_3 h2 ~ h2');
/*
[
{
selector: 'ul#nav li.active a',
specificity: '0,1,1,3',
...
},
{
selector: 'body.ie7 .col_3 h2 ~ h2',
specificity: '0,0,2,3',
...
}
]
*/Comparing two selectors
Specificity Calculator also exports a compare function.
This function accepts two CSS selectors or specificity arrays,
a and b.
- It returns
-1ifahas a lower specificity thanb - It returns
1ifahas a higher specificity thanb - It returns
0ifahas the same specificity thanb
compare('div', '.active'); // -1
compare('#main', 'div'); // 1
compare('span', 'div'); // 0
compare('span', [0, 0, 0, 1]); // 0
compare('#main > div', [0, 1, 0, 1]); // 0Ordering an array of selectors by specificity
You can pass the compare function to
Array.prototype.sort to sort an array of CSS selectors by
specificity.
import { compare } from 'specificity';
['#main', 'p', '.active'].sort(compare); // ['p', '.active', '#main']Command-line usage
Run npm install specificity to install the module
locally, or npm install -g specificity for global
installation. Run specificity without arguments to learn
about its usage:
$ specificity
Usage: specificity <selector>
Computes specificity of a CSS selector.Pass a selector as the first argument to get its specificity computed:
$ specificity "ul#nav li.active a"
0,1,1,3Testing
To install dependencies, run: npm install
Then to test, run: npm test