This module has moved and is now available at https://github.com/jonkemp/inline-css/tree/master/packages/style-data. This repository is no longer maintained.
Get the content of style tags.
Install with npm
npm install --save style-data
var getStylesData = require('style-data');
getStylesData(html, options, function (err, results) {
console.log(results.html); // resulting html
console.log(results.css); // array of css rules
});
Type: Boolean
Default: true
Whether to inline styles in <style></style>
.
Type: Boolean
Default: true
Whether to remove the original <style></style>
tags after (possibly) inlining the css from them.
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Preserves all media queries (and contained styles) within <style></style>
tags as a refinement when removeStyleTags
is true
. Other styles are removed.
Type: Object
Default: { EJS: { start: '<%', end: '%>' }, HBS: { start: '{{', end: '}}' } }
An object where each value has a start
and end
to specify fenced code blocks that should be ignored during parsing. For example, Handlebars (hbs) templates are HBS: {start: '{{', end: '}}'}
. Note that codeBlocks
is a dictionary which can contain many different code blocks, so don't do codeBlocks: {...}
do codeBlocks.myBlock = {...}
.
When a data-embed attribute is present on a <style></style> tag, style-data will not inline the styles and will not remove the <style></style> tags.
This can be used to embed email client support hacks that rely on css selectors into your email templates.
Options to passed to cheerio.
The code for this module was originally taken from the Juice library.
MIT © Jonathan Kemp