Clears the junk out of your CSS by finding out which selectors are actually not used in your HTML.
By Peter Bengtsson, 2012-2018
Tested in Python 2.7, 3.3, 3.4 and 3.5
$ mincss https://github.com
From pip:
$ pip install mincss
With the onslaught of Twitter Bootstrap upon the world it's very tempting to just download their whole fat 80+Kb CSS and serve it up even though you're not using half of the HTML that it styles.
There's also the case of websites that have changed over time but without the CSS getting the same amount of love refactoring. Then it's very likely that you get CSS selectors that you're no longer or never using.
This tool can help you get started reducing all those selectors that you're not using.
No, that's a separate concern. This tool works independent of whitespace compression/optimization.
For example, if you have a build step or a runtime step that converts all your CSS files into one (concatenation) and trims away all the excess whitespace (compression) then the output CSS can still contain selectors that are never actually used.
If you have a script that creates DOM elements in some sort of
window.onload
event then mincss
will not be able to know this
because at the moment mincss
is entirely static.
So what is a web developer to do? Simple, use /* no mincss */
like
this for example:
.logged-in-info { /* no mincss */ color: pink; }
That tells mincss
to ignore the whole block and all its selectors.
By default, mincss
will find all <link rel="stylesheet" ...
and
<style...>
tags and process them. If you have a link or an inline
tag that you don't want mincss
to even notice, simply add this attribute
to the tag:
data-mincss="ignore"
One technique to have a specific CSS selector be ignored by mincss
is to
put in a comment like /* no mincss */
inside the CSS selectors
block.
Another way is to leave the whole stylesheet as is. The advantage of doing
this is if you have a link
or style
tag that you want mincss
to ignore but still find and include in the parsed result.