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Consider using w3c/webref? #5
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Wow!
I would help with a linter or some sort of testing script to achieve it. From my perspective, csstree's definition syntax parser is stable enough and tested on |
Great to hear of the likely convergence! re NPM package, we've posted the first one out yesterday for IDL fragments: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@webref/idl I expect CSS definitions will follow shortly once we figure w3c/reffy#494 out (thanks for commenting there!). I think adding data not extracted from specs to that package would be absolutely in order (esp as MDN browser compat data is already one of the primary customers of webref). For your 5th use case, if you have more details on what you have in mind, that would definitely help with designing the future package, so please chime in in https://github.com/w3c/webref/issues |
W3C now maintains an automatically updated extract of the CSS fragments (along with other spec artefacts) in https://github.com/w3c/webref/ (extracted via https://github.com/w3c/reffy/) - this could serve as a replacement for this project? In particular, it extracts the said fragments from more than the csswg-drafts repo since a few CSS-defining specs are hosted in other repos.
We're looking at guaranteeing in the published fragments parseability by the csstree's css grammar parser - see w3c/reffy#494 where directly related discussion is happening
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