a CSS selector parser in JS
$ npm install CSSselect
a CSS selector compiler/engine
##What?
CSSselect turns CSS selectors into functions that tests if elements match them. When searching for elements, testing is executed "from the top", similar to how browsers execute CSS selectors.
In its default configuration, CSSselect queries the DOM structure of the domhandler
module.
Features:
##API
var CSSselect = require("CSSselect");
####CSSselect(query, elems, options)
query
can be either a function or a string. If it's a string, the string is compiled as a CSS selector.elems
can be either an array of elements, or a single element. If it is an element, its children will be used (so we're working with an array again).options
is described below.Queries elems
, returns an array containing all matches.
Aliases: CSSselect.selectAll(query, elems)
, CSSselect.iterate(query, elems)
.
####CSSselect.compile(query)
Compiles the query, returns the function.
####CSSselect.is(elem, query, options)
Tests whether or not an element is matched by query
. query
can be either a CSS selector or a function.
####CSSselect.selectOne(query, elems, options)
Arguments are the same as for CSSselect(query, elems)
. Only returns the first match, or null
if there was no match.
###Options
xmlMode
: When enabled, tag names will be case-sensitive. Default: false
.strict
: Limits the module to only use CSS3 selectors. Default: false
.rootFunc
: The last function in the stack. Will be called with the last element that's looked at. Should return true
if it shouldn't be called again for every matching subselector.##Why?
The common approach of executing CSS selectors (used eg. by Sizzle
, nwmatcher
and qwery
) is to execute every component of the selector in order, from left to right. The selector a b
for example will first look for a
elements, then search these for b
elements.
While this works, it has some downsides: Children of a
s will be checked multiple times, first, to check if they are also a
s, then, for every superior a
once, if they are b
s. Using Big O notation, that would be O(n^2)
.
The far more efficient approach is to first look for b
elements, then check if they have superior a
elements: Using big O notation again, that would be O(n)
.
And that's exactly what CSSselect does.
##How?
By stacking functions!
//TODO: Better explanation. For now, if you're interested, have a look at the source code.
##Supported selectors:
*
)<tagname>
)
)>
)<
) *+
)~
)[attr=foo]
), with supported comparisons:
[attr]
(existential)=
~=
|=
*=
^=
$=
!=
*i
can be added after the comparison to make the comparison case-insensitive (eg. [attr=foo i]
) *:not
:contains
*:has
*:root
:empty
:parent
*:[first|last]-child[-of-type]
:only-of-type
, :only-child
:nth-[last-]child[-of-type]
:selected
*, :checked
:enabled
, :disabled
:header
, :button
, :input
, :text
, :checkbox
, :file
, :password
, :reset
, :radio
etc. **: Non-standard extensions
License: BSD-like
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