CSS coding conventions checker


 
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Old 09-13-2009
CSS coding conventions checker

I would like to use an automated checker for adherence to CSS coding conventions. I have browsed the web, but no tool I came across checks for coding conventions, only syntax. Here is a general list of requirements:
- Style definitions should be separated by one blank line
- Indentation is 2 spaces, use spaces instead of tabs
- A colon (:) should be followed by one space
- The opening brace ({) should be prefixed with one space and appear at the same line as the selector
- Shorthand should be used where applicable
- Property value pairs should end in a semicolon (;)
- 0px should be spelled as 0
- Names of selectors, properties and values are lowercase, colors in RGB style are uppercase

Does anyone know of a tool that points out conventions such as the above or can recommend one?

Last edited by figaro; 09-13-2009 at 06:13 AM.. Reason: Removed semantical mistake.
 
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CSS::Minifier::XS(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				    CSS::Minifier::XS(3pm)

NAME
CSS::Minifier::XS - XS based CSS minifier SYNOPSIS
use CSS::Minifier::XS qw(minify); $minified = minify($css); DESCRIPTION
"CSS::Minifier::XS" is a CSS "minifier"; its designed to remove un-necessary whitespace and comments from CSS files, while also not breaking the CSS. "CSS::Minifier::XS" is similar in function to "CSS::Minifier", but is substantially faster as its written in XS and not just pure Perl. METHODS
minify($css) Minifies the given $css, returning the minified CSS back to the caller. HOW IT WORKS
"CSS::Minifier::XS" minifies the CSS by removing un-necessary whitespace from CSS documents. Comment blocks are also removed, except when (a) they contain the word "copyright" in them, or (b) they're needed to implement the "Mac/IE Comment Hack". Internally, the minification is done by taking multiple passes through the CSS document: Pass 1: Tokenize First, we go through and parse the CSS document into a series of tokens internally. The tokenizing process does not check to make sure that you've got syntactically valid CSS, it just breaks up the text into a stream of tokens suitable for processing by the subsequent stages. Pass 2: Collapse We then march through the token list and collapse certain tokens down to their smallest possible representation. If they're still included in the final results we only want to include them at their shortest. Whitespace Runs of multiple whitespace characters are reduced down to a single whitespace character. If the whitespace contains any "end of line" (EOL) characters, then the end result is the first EOL character encountered. Otherwise, the result is the first whitespace character in the run. Comments Comments implementing the "Mac/IE Comment Hack" are collapsed down to the smallest possible comment that would still implement the hack ("/**/" to start the hack, and "/**/" to end it). Pass 3: Pruning We then go back through the token list and prune and remove un-necessary tokens. Whitespace Wherever possible, whitespace is removed; before+after comment blocks, and before+after various symbols/sigils. Comments Comments that either (a) are needed to implement the "Mac/IE Comment Hack", or that (b) contain the word "copyright" in them are preserved. All other comments are removed. Symbols/Sigils Semi-colons that are immediately followed by a closing brace (e.g. ";}") are removed; semi-colons are needed to separate multiple declarations, but aren't required at the end of a group. Everything else We keep everything else; identifiers, quoted literal strings, symbols/sigils, etc. Pass 4: Re-assembly Lastly, we go back through the token list and re-assemble it all back into a single CSS string, which is then returned back to the caller. AUTHOR
Graham TerMarsch (cpan@howlingfrog.com) REPORTING BUGS
Please report bugs via RT (<http://rt.cpan.org/Dist/Display.html?Queue=CSS::Minifier::XS>), and be sure to include the CSS that you're having troubles minifying. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2007-2010, Graham TerMarsch. All Rights Reserved. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same license as Perl itself. SEE ALSO
"CSS::Minifier". perl v5.14.2 2011-11-15 CSS::Minifier::XS(3pm)