A command line utility taking into regular CSS styles or SASS files and generating, for each one, a corresponding style file but with Typestyle as the underlying library.
You can install it locally to your project( and it will be available in node_modules/.bin/tsconvert
)
npm i tsconvert
Or globally:
npm i -g tsconvert
After you have installed it a command line utility named tsconvert
will be available from your terminal.
The command line accepts 3 parameters:
tsconvert -f dir -ext css,scss --overwrite
ALL parameters are optional.
The meaning of the params and their default value is:
-
-f
- Designated a directory name or a full file path to process. If a directory it searches recursively for all files having the designated extensions and converts them into Typestyle. Defaults toprocess.cwd()
. -
-ext
- A list of file extensions to process. Defaults tocss,scss
. -
-overwrite
- If the target output file(Typestyle file) exists already and this flag is set to true it will overwrite. Otherwise no. Defaults tofalse
.
Sass files are compiled to regular CSS with Node-Sass prior to being transformed into Typestyle. For each CSS rule it will try to generate a class name, so the resulting CSS might not be functionally equivalent to the input CSS.
The name of the class being generated is composed by stringing together the selectors of the rule and camel casing everything.
Example
.btn {
font-size: 20px;
}
.btn:hover {
font-size: 60px;
}
a button {
font-size: 40px;
}
#main {
background-color: blue;
}
After running the utility it will generate 3 classes:
export const btn = style({ fontSize:'20px',
$nest: { '&:hover':
{ fontSize: '60px' }
}
});
export const aButton = style({ fontSize:'40px' });
export const main = style({ backgroundColor: 'blue' });
The you can import and apply these classes as you see fit