Parcel CSS: A New CSS Parser, Transformer, and Minifier

Publikováno: 12.1.2022

Hot off the presses from Devon Govett, creator of Parcel, is Parcel CSS:

A CSS parser, transformer, and minifier written in Rust.

Nice. The CSS world could use a little processing shake up like this.

I just wrote a


Parcel CSS: A New CSS Parser, Transformer, and Minifier originally published on CSS-Tricks. You should get the newsletter and become a supporter.

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Hot off the presses from Devon Govett, creator of Parcel, is Parcel CSS:

A CSS parser, transformer, and minifier written in Rust.

Nice. The CSS world could use a little processing shake up like this.

I just wrote a few weeks ago:

Ya know how esbuild has seriously shaken things up for the JavaScript processing world? Maybe we need a cssbuild? It would process imports and do bundling (something we generally rely on Sass for). The point would be extreme speed. Maybe it would be plugin-based and compatible with the PostCSS API so that existing PostCSS plugins would work on it. Maybe it could make sourcemaps and do modification. Maybe it would run your Sass, too, I dunno. But something to spark the CSS ecosystem like that could be cool.

It looks like it doesn’t do bundling (standalone anyway). I suppose it would have to just invent a syntax for that, as I think Sass somewhat regrets the ambiguity of how it uses @import just like native CSS does and I wouldn’t blame anyone for not wanting to go down that road. It’s tricky territory, for sure, as inventing syntax kinda puts it into a different category of tool. I think it would be worth it though, as breaking up CSS into smaller files but bundling them in development is like… a thing people do.

So why run your CSS through this thing? From the docs, it looks like you’d wanna do that because…

  • it’s a minifier (looks like it’s cssnano under the hood),
  • it does vendor prefixing (looks like it’s Autoprefixer under the hood),
  • it can process as CSS modules (the classic library, not the native ones), and
  • you get sourcemaps.

But it seems like the killer Parcel CSS feature is what they are calling “Syntax lowering” meaning you can use “future” CSS today (like, say, nesting) by having it processed down to things that browsers understand, like Babel does in JavaScript.

Tow line charts chowing how fast Parcel CSS bundles packages and how small the resulting files are.
Parcel CSS is fast and outputs small files. (Source: @devongovett)

I have no idea what powers Parcel CSS. though it feels similar in spirit to postcss-preset-env. I’m unsure if that’s what’s being leveraged or not. I guess PostCSS is required for Autoprefixer which is being used, so maybe? I just don’t see it in the package.json.

Will Parcel CSS become an ecosystem?

So I guess the big question is: If Parcel CSS becomes the CSS parser of choice, will we get plugins? And if we do, will it become a robust ecosystem like PostCSS plugins?


Parcel CSS: A New CSS Parser, Transformer, and Minifier originally published on CSS-Tricks. You should get the newsletter and become a supporter.

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