$ npm install postcss-preset-env
PostCSS Preset Env lets you convert modern CSS into something most browsers can understand, determining the polyfills you need based on your targeted browsers or runtime environments.
PostCSS Preset Env is a PostCSS plugin.
If you are already using PostCSS to build your CSS, you can simply add PostCSS Preset Env to your configuration.
postcss-preset-env
from npm.postcss-preset-env
to your configuration.const postcssPresetEnv = require('postcss-preset-env');
const yourConfig = {
plugins: [
/* other plugins */
/* remove autoprefixer if you had it here, it's part of postcss-preset-env */
postcssPresetEnv({
/* pluginOptions */
features: {},
})
]
}
Read more on how to use and install PostCSS Preset Env.
PostCSS Preset Env is a Plugin Pack for PostCSS. It leverages the list of the features we keep an eye from CSSDB and applies plugins, so you can use those new features without having to worry about browser support.
CSSDB exposes the browser support that each feature has which can come from Can I Use or from MDN (through mdn/browser-compat-data).
By providing a list of browser targets for your project, plugins that aren't needed will be skipped. Over time your targets might change and by updating the settings your CSS bundle will only ever contain the needed fallbacks.
What PostCSS Preset Env does is to take the support data that comes from MDN and Can I Use and determine from a browserslist whether those transformations are needed. It also packs Autoprefixer within and shares the list with it, so prefixes are only applied when you're going to need them given your browser support list.
chrome < 42
will give you a list of every Chrome version that has been released up to, but not including, 42.hwb
functional notation lets you express a given color according to its hue, whiteness, and blackness. This is part of the CSS Color 4 Spec.Here's a quick example of the syntax you can leverage by using PostCSS Preset Env.
@custom-media --viewport-medium (width <= 50rem);
@custom-selector :--heading h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6;
:root {
--mainColor: #12345678;
}
body {
color: var(--mainColor);
font-family: system-ui;
overflow-wrap: break-word;
}
:--heading {
background-image: image-set(url(img/heading.png) 1x, url(img/heading@2x.png) 2x);
@media (--viewport-medium) {
margin-block: 0;
}
}
a {
color: rgb(0 0 100% / 90%);
&:hover {
color: rebeccapurple;
}
}
/* becomes */
:root {
--mainColor: rgba(18, 52, 86, 0.47059);
}
body {
color: rgba(18, 52, 86, 0.47059);
color: var(--mainColor);
font-family: system-ui, -apple-system, BlinkMacSystemFont, Segoe UI, Roboto, Oxygen, Ubuntu, Cantarell, Droid Sans, Helvetica Neue;
word-wrap: break-word;
}
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
background-image: url(img/heading.png);
}
@media (-webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 2), (min-resolution: 192dpi) {
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
background-image: url(img/heading@2x.png)
}
}
@media (max-width: 50rem) {
h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6 {
margin-top: 0;
margin-bottom: 0;
}
}
a {
color: rgba(0, 0, 255, 0.9)
}
a:hover {
color: #639;
}
Without any configuration options, PostCSS Preset Env enables Stage 2 features and supports all browsers.
[!NOTE] Please note that some features need a companion library that makes the feature work. While we try to avoid this requirement, there are instances in which this isn't possible to polyfill a new behaviour with just CSS.
Add PostCSS Preset Env to your project:
npm install postcss-preset-env --save-dev
Use PostCSS Preset Env as a PostCSS plugin:
const postcss = require('postcss');
const postcssPresetEnv = require('postcss-preset-env');
postcss([
postcssPresetEnv(/* pluginOptions */)
]).process(YOUR_CSS /*, processOptions */);
PostCSS Preset Env runs in all Node environments, with special instructions for:
PostCSS Preset Env only contains polyfills and fallbacks for standard CSS features and is unable to handle non-standard features and syntactic sugar.
If you also have PostCSS plugins for non-standard features and syntactic sugar,
you should place these first in the PostCSS plugins list.
module.exports = {
plugins: [
"postcss-syntactic-sugar",
"postcss-non-standard",
// ...
[
"postcss-preset-env",
{
// plugin options
},
],
// ...
// maybe a minifier?
],
};
You can also use the insertBefore
/ insertAfter
plugin options for more fine grained control.
The stage
option determines which CSS features to polyfill, based upon their
stability in the process of becoming implemented web standards.
postcssPresetEnv({ stage: 0 })
The stage
can be 0
(experimental) through 4
(stable), or false
. Setting
stage
to false
will disable every polyfill. Doing this would only be useful
if you intended to exclusively use the features
option.
Default: 2
It is very rare for features to progress beyond stage 2
.
Use minimumVendorImplementations
if you prefer to keep up with modern features.
The minimumVendorImplementations
option determines which CSS features to polyfill, based their implementation status.
This can be used to enable plugins that are available in browsers regardless of the spec status.
postcssPresetEnv({ minimumVendorImplementations: 2 })
minimumVendorImplementations
can be 0
(no vendor has implemented it) through 3
(all major vendors).
Default: 0
Note:
When a feature has not yet been implemented by any vendor it can be considered experimental.
Even with a single implementation it might still change in the future.
Sometimes issues with a feature/specification are only discovered after it becomes available.
A value of 2
is recommended when you want to use only those features that should be stable.
Having 2 independent implementations is a critical step in proposals becoming standards and a good indicator of a feature's stability.
The features
option enables or disables specific polyfills by ID. Passing
true
to a specific feature ID will enable its polyfill, while passing false
will disable it. List of Features
postcssPresetEnv({
/* use stage 3 features + css nesting rules */
stage: 3,
features: {
'nesting-rules': true
}
})
Passing an object to a specific feature ID will both enable and configure it.
postcssPresetEnv({
/* use stage 3 features + custom-selectors (preserving the original CSS) */
stage: 3,
features: {
'custom-selectors': { preserve: true }
}
})
If you want to preserve automatic enabling of features
based on the stage, implementations and or browserslist,
you can pass an array: ['auto', { /* plugin options */ }]
.
postcssPresetEnv({
/* use stage 3 features + custom-selectors (preserving the original CSS) */
stage: 3,
features: {
'custom-selectors': ['auto', { preserve: true }]
}
})
Any polyfills not explicitly enabled or disabled through features
are
determined by the stage
option.
PostCSS Preset Env supports standard browserslist configuration, which can
be a .browserslistrc
file, a browserslist
key in package.json
, or
browserslist
environment variables.
The env
option is used by browserslist to determine the named environment
that should be used when you have multiple browserslist environments
configured. If not set, Browserslist will use the production
environment.
/* use the environment named `development`, instead of the default environment of `production` */
postcssPresetEnv({ env: 'development' })
The browsers
option overrides any existing browserslist configuration.
The browsers
option should only be used when a standard browserslist
configuration is not available.
When the browsers
option is used the env
option will be ignored.
postcssPresetEnv({ browsers: 'last 2 versions' })
If no valid browserslist configuration is specified, the default browserslist query will be used.
The insertBefore
and insertAfter
keys allow you to insert other PostCSS
plugins into the chain. This is only useful if you are also using sugary
PostCSS plugins that must execute before or after certain polyfills.
Both insertBefore
and insertAfter
support chaining one or multiple plugins.
import postcssSimpleVars from 'postcss-simple-vars';
postcssPresetEnv({
insertBefore: {
'all-property': postcssSimpleVars
}
})
PostCSS Preset Env includes autoprefixer; the env
and browsers
options will be passed to it automatically.
Specifying the autoprefixer
option enables passing
additional options
into autoprefixer.
postcssPresetEnv({
autoprefixer: { grid: true }
})
Passing autoprefixer: false
disables autoprefixer.
⚠️ autoprefixer has complex logic to fix CSS Grid in IE and older Edge.
This can have unexpected results with certain features and when preserve: true
is used. (defaults to true
)
:root {
--grid-gap: 15px;
}
.test-grid {
grid-gap: var(--grid-gap);
grid-template-columns: repeat(2, 1fr);
}
Becomes :
.test-grid {
grid-gap: 15px;
grid-gap: var(--grid-gap);
-ms-grid-columns: 1fr var(--grid-gap) 1fr;
grid-template-columns: repeat(2, 1fr);
}
The prefixed -ms-grid-columns
still has a custom property: 1fr var(--grid-gap) 1fr;
which won't work.
This example shows issues with custom properties but other transforms might have similar issues.
If you target IE or older Edge it is best to avoid using other modern features in grid property values.
As a last resort you can set preserve: false
, we do not advice this as doing so purely to fix issues with CSS grid.
older Edge is any version before chromium (<79)
The preserve
option determines whether all plugins should receive a
preserve
option, which may preserve or remove otherwise-polyfilled CSS. By
default, this option is not configured.
postcssPresetEnv({
preserve: false // instruct all plugins to omit pre-polyfilled CSS
});
The debug
option enables debugging messages to stdout which should be useful to help you debug which features have been enabled/disabled and why.
The enableClientSidePolyfills
enables all features that also need an extra browser library to be loaded into the page for it to work. Defaults to false
.
The logical
option can hold an object which lets you specify direction of the inline and block axes and will affect the
following features:
logical-properties-and-values
: PostCSS Logicalfloat-clear-logical-values
: PostCSS Logical Float And Clearlogical-resize
: PostCSS Logical Resizelogical-viewport-units
: PostCSS Logical Viewport UnitsIt should have blockDirection
and/or inlineDirection
which can be any of the following:
top-to-bottom
bottom-to-top
left-to-right
right-to-left
postcssPresetEnv({
logical: { // instruct all logical plugins to set inline axis to right to left
inlineDirection: 'right-to-left',
},
});
.element {
float: inline-start;
padding-inline-end: 10px;
}
Becomes :
.element {
float: right;
padding-left: 10px;
}
You can't mix two vertical directions or two horizontal directions so for example top-to-bottom
and right-to-left
are valid, but top-to-bottom
and bottom-to-top
are not.
You might want to tweak these values if you are using a different writing system, such as Arabic, Hebrew or Chinese for example.
PostCSS Preset Env will often include very modern CSS features that are not fully ready yet. This gives users the chance to play around with these features and provide feedback.
If the specification changes or is abandoned a new major version of the plugin will be released. This will require you to update your source code so that everything works as expected.
To have more stability between updates of PostCSS Preset Env you may set stage: 3
and/or minimumVendorImplementations: 2
.
A side effect of staying close to the standard is that you can more easily migrate your project to other tooling all together.
This is the current list of features that need a client library with a link to the polyfill's library.
blank-pseudo-class
: Plugin / Polyfillfocus-visible-pseudo-class
: Plugin / Polyfillfocus-within-pseudo-class
: Plugin / Polyfillhas-pseudo-class
: Plugin / Polyfillprefers-color-scheme-query
: Plugin / PolyfillIf you want to enable all these types of features, please check the enableClientSidePolyfills
option.
Given they have no support they will always be enabled if they match by Stage:
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