Pleeease works via the Node.js command like, taking a CSS file as input and generating a new version of the file that upgrades the CSS code syntax to work better in today's tangled mess of Internet browsers.
This means Pleeease will add all the proper browser bendor prefixes to your code (if you forgot any), provide fallback for the newer "rem" CSS unit, add opacity filters for older IE browsers, and compress all media queries in one single @media rule.
Pleeease will also load and merge all CSS files loaded via @import into the outputted file and minify all the resulted code for fewer HTTP requests and a smaller file size.
The resulted file will be outputted to a new file, keeping the original CSS file intact and unharmed. This allows changes to be made to the original, and then re-post-processed again via Pleeease without losing the original code.
Developers can still use CSS pre-processors like SASS or LESS with Pleeease, the two not interacting with each other.
What is new in this release:
- Added:
- Less 2.4.0
- Stylus 0.50.0
What is new in version 3.4.0:
- Added:
- Less 2.4.0
- Stylus 0.50.0
What is new in version 3.3.0:
- Added:
- Less 2.4.0
- Stylus 0.50.0
What is new in version 3.2.6:
- Added:
- Less 2.4.0
- Stylus 0.50.0
What is new in version 3.2.0:
- Added:
- Less 2.4.0
- Stylus 0.50.0
What is new in version 3.0.0:
- Pleeease package no longer contains CLI tool. You have to uninstall it and use pleeease-cli instead.
What is new in version 2.0.0:
- Now uses PostCSS v3.0.0
- Now uses Pixrem v1.0.0
- New browsers option
- mqpacker option set to false
Requirements:
- Node.js
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