Plumb everything up. This factors out declaration and rule parsing so we share the code with the regular declaration parser. This could be made a bit nicer in the future. We need to decide what to do for @page and @keyframe (it seems conditional rules inside ought to work, but that's not so easy because per spec we create a nested style rule). But this is a first pass that passes a good chunk of the tests. There are other fixups to cssom, and I think some of the tests we fail are actually wrong... Differential Revision: https://phabricator.services.mozilla.com/D178266 |
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.. | ||
attr.rs | ||
bloom.rs | ||
build.rs | ||
builder.rs | ||
Cargo.toml | ||
context.rs | ||
lib.rs | ||
matching.rs | ||
nth_index_cache.rs | ||
parser.rs | ||
README.md | ||
rustfmt.toml | ||
sink.rs | ||
tree.rs | ||
visitor.rs |
rust-selectors
CSS Selectors library for Rust. Includes parsing and serialization of selectors, as well as matching against a generic tree of elements. Pseudo-elements and most pseudo-classes are generic as well.
Warning: breaking changes are made to this library fairly frequently (13 times in 2016, for example). However you can use this crate without updating it that often, old versions stay available on crates.io and Cargo will only automatically update to versions that are numbered as compatible.
To see how to use this library with your own tree representation,
see Kuchiki’s src/select.rs
.
(Note however that Kuchiki is not always up to date with the latest rust-selectors version,
so that code may need to be tweaked.)
If you don’t already have a tree data structure,
consider using Kuchiki itself.