CSS::Tiny - Read/Write .css files with as little code as possible |
CSS::Tiny - Read/Write .css files with as little code as possible
# In your .css file H1 { color: blue } H2 { color: red; font-family: Arial } .this, .that { color: yellow } # In your program use CSS::Tiny; # Create a CSS stylesheet my $CSS = CSS::Tiny->new(); # Open a CSS stylesheet $CSS = CSS::Tiny->read( 'style.css' ); # Reading properties my $header_color = $CSS->{H1}->{color}; my $header2_hashref = $CSS->{H2}; my $this_color = $CSS->{'.this'}->{color}; my $that_color = $CSS->{'.that'}->{color}; # Changing styles and properties $CSS->{'.newstyle'} = { color => '#FFFFFF' }; # Add a style $CSS->{H1}->{color} = 'black'; # Change a property delete $CSS->{H2}; # Delete a style # Save a CSS stylesheet $CSS->write( 'style.css' ); # Get the CSS as a <style>...</style> tag $CSS->html;
CSS::Tiny
is a perl class to read and write .css stylesheets with as
little code as possible, reducing load time and memory overhead. CSS.pm
requires about 2.6 meg or ram to load, which is a large amount of
overhead if you only want to do trivial things.
Memory usage is normally scoffed at in Perl, but in my opinion should be
at least kept in mind.
This module is primarily for reading and writing simple files, and anything we write shouldn't need to have documentation/comments. If you need something with more power, move up to CSS.pm. With the increasing complexity of CSS, this is becoming more common, but many situations can still live with simple CSS files.
CSS::Tiny
supports grouped styles of the form
this, that { color: blue }
correctly when reading, ungrouping them into
the hash structure. However, it will not restore the grouping should you
write the file back out. In this case, an entry in the original file of
the form
H1, H2 { color: blue }
would become
H1 { color: blue } H2 { color: blue }
CSS::Tiny
handles nested styles of the form P EM { color: red }
in reads and writes correctly, making the property available in the
form
$CSS->{'P EM'}->{color}
CSS::Tiny
ignores comments of the form /* comment */
on read
correctly, however these comments will not be written back out to the
file.
Files are written in a relatively human-orientated form, as follows:
H1 { color: blue; } .this { color: red; font-size: 10px; } P EM { color: yellow; }
When reading and writing, all property descriptors, for example color
and font-size
in the example above, are converted to lower case. As an
example, take the following CSS.
P { Font-Family: Verdana; }
To get the value 'Verdana'
from the object $CSS
, you should
reference the key $CSS->{P}->{font-family}
.
The constructor new
creates and returns an empty CSS::Tiny
object.
The read
constructor reads a CSS stylesheet, and returns a new
CSS::Tiny
object containing the properties in the file.
Returns the object on success, or undef
on error.
The read_string
constructor reads a CSS stylesheet from a string.
Returns the object on success, or undef
on error.
The clone
method creates an identical copy of an existing CSS::Tiny
object.
The write $filename
generates the stylesheet for the properties, and
writes it to disk. Returns true on success. Returns undef
on error.
Generates the stylesheet for the object and returns it as a string.
The html
method generates the CSS, but wrapped in a style
HTML tag,
so that it can be dropped directly onto a HTML page.
The html
method generates the CSS, but wrapped in a style
XHTML tag,
so that it can be dropped directly onto an XHTML page.
When an error occurs, you can retrieve the error message either from the
$CSS::Tiny::errstr
variable, or using the errstr
method.
Bugs should be reported via the CPAN bug tracker at
http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html
For other issues, or commercial enhancement or support, contact the author.
Adam Kennedy <adamk@cpan.org>
CSS, http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS1, the Config::Tiny manpage, http://ali.as/
Copyright 2002 - 2007 Adam Kennedy.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
The full text of the license can be found in the LICENSE file included with this module.
CSS::Tiny - Read/Write .css files with as little code as possible |