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jsincss-element-units

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# jsincss-element-units An element unit plugin for [jsincss](https://github.com/tomhodgins/jsincss) ## About This plugin is a JavaScript module that works with [JS-in-CSS stylesheets](https://responsive.style/theory/what-is-a-jic-stylesheet.html), to use element-percentage units as values for any property in CSS. ## Downloading You can download jsincss-element-units and add it to your codebase manually, or download it with npm: ```bash npm install jsincss-element-units ``` Another option that works for building or testing, that isn't ideal for production use, is linking to the module directly from a CDN like unpkg: ```html <script type=module> import eunit from 'https://unpkg.com/jsincss-element-units/index.vanilla.js' </script> ``` ## Importing This plugin exists in three different formats: - CommonJS module: [index.js](index.js) - Vanilla JS module: [index.vanilla.js](index.vanilla.js) - Browser function: [index.browser.js](index.browser.js) You can import this plugin using the native [`import`](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/import) statement in JavaScript. Here you can assign any name you want to the function you are importing, and you only need to provide a path to the plugin's `index.vanilla.js` file: ```js import eunit from './index.vanilla.js' ``` You can also use the CommonJS-formatted module located at [index.js](index.js) with `require()` for use with bundlers that don't use vanilla JS modules. Once you have imported this plugin into your module, you can use the plugin as `eunit()` ## Using JS-in-CSS Stylesheets The main goal of this plugin is to allow CSS authors the ability to use units based on a percentage of the width or height of an element. Similar to the viewport-percentage units (`vw`, `vh`, `vmin`, and `vmax`) these units are called `ew`, `eh`, `emin`, and `emax`. The plugin has the following format: ```js eunit(selector, rule) ``` - `selector` is a string containing a CSS selector - `rule` is a string or template string containing a CSS rule, that can include `ew`, `eh`, `emin`, and `emax` units ## Example This example will use the `jsincss` plugin to load a JS-in-CSS stylesheet making use of this plugin. To test it in a JavaScript module, import both the `jsincss` package and any helper plugins you want: ```html <script type=module> import jsincss from 'https://unpkg.com/jsincss/index.vanilla.js' import eunit from 'https://unpkg.com/jsincss-element-units/index.vanilla.js' jsincss(() => ` ${eunit('h1', ` font-size: 10ew; `)} `) </script> ``` It's also possible to write your stylesheets as a separate JavaScript module like this, where you import any helper plugins at the top of the stylesheet: ```js import eunit from 'https://unpkg.com/jsincss-element-units/index.vanilla.js' export default () => ` ${eunit('h1', ` font-size: 10ew; `)} ` ``` And then import both the `jsincss` plugin and the stylesheet into your code and run them like this, suppling any `selector` or `events` list the `jsincss` plugin might need to apply the stylesheet only the the element(s) and event(s) you require, depending on what you're doing: ```js import jsincss from 'https://unpkg.com/jsincss/index.vanilla.js' import stylesheet from './path/to/stylesheet.js' jsincss(stylesheet) ``` ## Compatible JS-in-CSS Stylesheet Loaders - [jsincss](https://github.com/tomhodgins/jsincss)