PostHTML plugin for Rollup
You might also be interested in posthtml.
By using commitizen and conventional commit messages, maintaining meaningful ChangeLog and commit history based on global conventions, following StandardJS code style through ESLint and having always up-to-date dependencies through integrations like GreenKeeper and David-DM service, this package has top quality.
By following Semantic Versioning through standard-version releasing tool, this package is very stable and its tests are passing both on Windows (AppVeyor) and Linux (CircleCI) with results from 100% to 400% test coverage, reported respectively by CodeCov and nyc (istanbul).
If you have any problems, consider opening an issue, ping me on twitter (@tunnckoCore), join the support chat room or queue a live session on CodeMentor with me. If you don't have any problems, you're using it somewhere or you just enjoy this product, then please consider donating some cash at PayPal, since this is OPEN Open Source project made with :heart: at Sofia, Bulgaria 🇧🇬.
(TOC generated by verb using markdown-toc)
Install with npm
$ npm install rollup-plugin-posthtml --save
or install using yarn
$ yarn add rollup-plugin-posthtml
For more use-cases see the tests
const rollupPluginPosthtml = require('rollup-plugin-posthtml')
A posthtml plugin for rollup. The
options
are passed directly to PostHTML's.process
method, so you can even parse a different parser and etc. You also can giveoptions.include
andoptions.exclude
as usual for any Rollup plugin. Theoptions.plugins
option is passed to PostHTML directly.
Params
options
{Object}: optional, passed directly to posthtml returns
{Object}: a Rollup plugin Example
import posthtml from 'rollup-plugin-posthtml'
import sugarml from 'posthtml-sugarml'
import customElements from 'posthtml-custom-elements'
export default {
entry: 'foo/bar/main.js',
plugins: [
posthtml({
parser: sugarml(),
plugins: customElements()
})
]
}
By default, processed code will be emitted as an ES module. In a such way, it will be wrapped with export default
and provide a string when being imported. Usually it is expected behavior.
However, you may have a need to get an unwrapped result, for example, to pass it to another Rollup plugin. In this case you can simply disable emitFile
option.
Let's have a look at the chaining PostHTML with a template compiler plugin:
import dot from 'rollup-plugin-dot'
import htmlnano from 'htmlnano'
export default {
entry: 'foo/bar/main.js',
plugins: [
posthtml({
emitFile: false,
plugins: [
htmlnano()
]
}),
dot({
templateSettings: {
strip: false
}
})
]
}
dush
, base
, minibase
and anything based on them. Works on Browser and Node.js | homepagedush
event emitter or anything based on it | homepagePull requests and stars are always welcome. For bugs and feature requests, please create an issue.
Please read the contributing guidelines for advice on opening issues, pull requests, and coding standards.
If you need some help and can spent some cash, feel free to contact me at CodeMentor.io too.
In short: If you want to contribute to that project, please follow these things
npm run commit
to commit changes instead of git commit
, because it is interactive and user-friendly. It uses commitizen behind the scenes, which follows Conventional Changelog idealogy.npm run release
, which is standard-version and follows Conventional Changelog idealogy.Thanks a lot! :)
Documentation and that readme is generated using verb-generate-readme, which is a verb generator, so you need to install both of them and then run verb
command like that
$ npm install verbose/verb#dev verb-generate-readme --global && verb
Please don't edit the README directly. Any changes to the readme must be made in .verb.md.
Clone repository and run the following in that cloned directory
$ npm install && npm test
Charlike Mike Reagent
Copyright © 2017, Charlike Mike Reagent. Released under the MIT License.
This file was generated by verb-generate-readme, v0.4.3, on April 02, 2017.
Project scaffolded using charlike cli.