A high-performance CSS selector parser with advanced features for modern web development.
- 🚀 Fast and memory-efficient parsing for all CSS selectors
- 🌳 AST-based object model for programmatic manipulation
- 🚶 AST traversal with visitor pattern for analyzing and transforming selectors
- 📊 Full compliance with all CSS selector specifications
- 🧪 Comprehensive test coverage
- 📚 Well-documented API with TypeScript support
- 🔄 Two-way conversion between CSS selectors and AST
- 🧩 Modular support for various CSS specifications
- 🎮 Interactive Playground - Try it in your browser!
🎮 Launch Interactive Playground
Test CSS selectors in your browser with syntax highlighting, real-time AST visualization, and configurable parser options.
-
css1: W3C CSS1 Specification -
css2: W3C CSS2 Specification -
css3/selectors-3: W3C Selectors Level 3 -
selectors-4: W3C Selectors Level 4 -
latest: refers toselectors-4 -
progressive:latest+ accepts unknown pseudo-classes, pseudo-elements and attribute case sensitivity modifiers
See Changelog for release details.
npm install css-selector-parser
# or
yarn add css-selector-parser
# or
pnpm add css-selector-parserimport { createParser } from 'css-selector-parser';
const parse = createParser();
const selector = parse('a[href^="/"], .container:has(nav) > a[href]:nth-child(2)::before');
console.log(selector);This produces an AST (Abstract Syntax Tree) output:
({
type: 'Selector',
rules: [
{
type: 'Rule',
items: [
{ type: 'TagName', name: 'a' },
{
type: 'Attribute',
name: 'href',
operator: '^=',
value: { type: 'String', value: '/' }
}
]
},
{
type: 'Rule',
items: [
{ type: 'ClassName', name: 'container' },
{
type: 'PseudoClass',
name: 'has',
argument: {
type: 'Selector',
rules: [
{
type: 'Rule',
items: [ { type: 'TagName', name: 'nav' } ]
}
]
}
}
],
nestedRule: {
type: 'Rule',
items: [
{ type: 'TagName', name: 'a' },
{ type: 'Attribute', name: 'href' },
{
type: 'PseudoClass',
name: 'nth-child',
argument: { type: 'Formula', a: 0, b: 2 }
},
{
type: 'PseudoElement',
name: 'before'
}
],
combinator: '>'
}
}
]
})import { ast, render } from 'css-selector-parser';
const selector = ast.selector({
rules: [
ast.rule({
items: [
ast.tagName({name: 'a'}),
ast.attribute({name: 'href', operator: '^=', value: ast.string({value: '/'})})
]
}),
ast.rule({
items: [
ast.className({name: 'container'}),
ast.pseudoClass({
name: 'has',
argument: ast.selector({
rules: [ast.rule({items: [ast.tagName({name: 'nav'})]})]
})
})
],
nestedRule: ast.rule({
combinator: '>',
items: [
ast.tagName({name: 'a'}),
ast.attribute({name: 'href'}),
ast.pseudoClass({
name: 'nth-child',
argument: ast.formula({a: 0, b: 2})
}),
ast.pseudoElement({name: 'before'})
]
})
})
]
});
console.log(render(selector)); // a[href^="/"], .container:has(nav) > a[href]:nth-child(2)::beforeThe traverse function allows you to walk through the AST and visit each node, making it easy to analyze or transform selectors.
import { createParser, traverse } from 'css-selector-parser';
const parse = createParser();
const selector = parse('div.foo > span#bar:hover::before');
// Simple visitor function - called for each node
traverse(selector, (node, context) => {
console.log(node.type, context.parents.length);
});
// Visitor with enter/exit hooks
traverse(selector, {
enter(node, context) {
console.log('Entering:', node.type);
if (node.type === 'ClassName') {
console.log('Found class:', node.name);
}
},
exit(node, context) {
console.log('Leaving:', node.type);
}
});
// Skip visiting children of specific nodes
traverse(selector, (node) => {
if (node.type === 'PseudoClass') {
// Don't visit children of pseudo-classes
return false;
}
});
// Practical example: collect all class names
const classNames = [];
traverse(selector, (node) => {
if (node.type === 'ClassName') {
classNames.push(node.name);
}
});
console.log(classNames); // ['foo']
// Access parent information
traverse(selector, (node, context) => {
console.log({
type: node.type,
parent: context.parent?.type,
depth: context.parents.length,
key: context.key,
index: context.index
});
});The traversal context provides:
-
node: The current AST node being visited -
parent: The parent node (undefined for root) -
parents: Array of all ancestor nodes from root to current -
key: Property name in parent that references this node -
index: Array index if this node is in an array
CSS Modules are specifications that add new selectors or modify existing ones. This parser supports various CSS modules that can be included in your syntax definition:
import { createParser } from 'css-selector-parser';
// Create a parser with specific CSS modules enabled
const parse = createParser({
syntax: 'selectors-4',
modules: ['css-position-3', 'css-scoping-1']
});| Module | Description |
|---|---|
css-position-1/2/3/4 |
Position-related pseudo-classes |
css-scoping-1 |
Shadow DOM selectors (:host, :host-context(), ::slotted()) |
css-pseudo-4 |
Modern pseudo-elements (::selection, ::backdrop, etc.) |
css-shadow-parts-1 |
::part() for styling shadow DOM components |
css-nesting-1 |
CSS Nesting selector (&) |
The latest syntax automatically includes all modules marked as current specifications.
- Complete API Documentation
- Parsing CSS Selectors
- Constructing CSS AST
- Rendering CSS AST
- Traversing CSS AST
Contributions are welcome! Please feel free to submit a Pull Request.
MIT
To report a security vulnerability, please use the Tidelift security contact. Tidelift will coordinate the fix and disclosure.
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