# Utils to work with AST - [property\(name\)](#propertyname) - [keyword\(name\)](#keywordname) - [clone\(ast\)](#cloneast) - [fromPlainObject\(object\)](#fromplainobjectobject) - [toPlainObject\(ast\)](#toplainobjectast) ## property(name) Returns details for a property name, such as vendor prefix, used hack etc. Using for safe test of declaration property names, i.e. `Declaration.property`. ```js var csstree = require('css-tree'); csstree.property('*-vendor-property'); // { // basename: 'property', // name: '-vendor-property', // hack: '*', // vendor: '-vendor-', // prefix: '*-vendor-', // custom: false // } csstree.property('--test-var'); // { // basename: '--test-var', // name: '--test-var', // hack: '', // vendor: '', // prefix: '', // custom: true // }; ``` `property()` function normalizes a name to lower case, except custom property names since they are case sensitive. It returns the same immutable (freezed) object for the same input (input after normalization). ```js csstree.property('name') === csstree.property('NAME') // true csstree.property('NAME').name === 'name' // true csstree.property('--custom') === csstree.property('--Custom') // false var info = csstree.property('NAME'); info.name === 'name'; // info.name = 'foo'; // have no effect info.name === 'name'; // true ``` Supported hacks: - `_` in the beginning - `+` in the beginning - `#` in the beginning - `*` in the beginning - `$` in the beginning - `/` in the beginning - `//` in the beginning ## keyword(name) Mostly the same as `property()` function, but without hack detection. Using for any identifier except declaration property name. ```js var csstree = require('css-tree'); csstree.keyword('-vendor-keyword'); // { // basename: 'keyword', // name: '-vendor-keyword', // vendor: '-vendor-', // prefix: '-vendor-', // custom: false // }; ``` ## clone(ast) Make AST deep copy. ```js var orig = csstree.parse('.test { color: red }'); var copy = csstree.clone(orig); csstree.walk(copy, function(node) { if (node.type === 'Class') { node.name = 'replaced'; } }); console.log(csstree.generate(orig)); // .test{color:red} console.log(csstree.generate(copy)); // .replaced{color:red} ``` ## fromPlainObject(object) `fromPlainObject()` walks through AST and coverts each `children` value into a `List` instance when value is an array. ```js var csstree = require('css-tree'); var ast = { type: 'SelectorList', children: [] }; console.log(Array.isArray(ast.children)); // true console.log(ast.children instanceof csstree.List); // false ast = csstree.fromPlainObject(ast); console.log(Array.isArray(ast.children)); // false console.log(ast.children instanceof csstree.List); // true ``` Function mutates the passed AST. Use `clone()` function before passing AST to `fromPlainObject()` in case you want to avoid original tree mutation. ```js astClone = csstree.fromPlainObject(csstree.clone(ast)); ``` ## toPlainObject(ast) `fromPlainObject()` walks through AST and coverts each `children` value to regular array when value is a `List` instance. ```js var csstree = require('css-tree'); var ast = { type: 'SelectorList', children: new List() }; console.log(Array.isArray(ast.children)); // false console.log(ast.children instanceof csstree.List); // true ast = csstree.toPlainObject(ast); console.log(Array.isArray(ast.children)); // true console.log(ast.children instanceof csstree.List); // false ``` Function mutates the passed AST. Use `clone()` function before passing AST to `toPlainObject()` in case you want to avoid original tree mutation. ```js ast = csstree.toPlainObject(csstree.clone(ast)); ```