According to one stylesheet, generate upx version and @1x, @2x and @3x stylesheet.
This set of tools contains:
- a CLI tool
- webpack loader
The raw stylesheet only contains @2x style, and if you
- don't intend to transform the original value, eg: 1px border, add
/*no*/
after the declaration - intend to use px by force,eg: font-size, add
/*px*/
after the declaration
Attention: Dealing with SASS or LESS, only /*...*/
comment can be used, in order to have the comments persisted
$ npm install -g px2upx
$ px2upx -o build src/*.wxss
Usage: px2upx [options] <file...>
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-u, --upxUnit [value] set `upx` unit value (default: 75)
-x, --threeVersion [value] whether to generate @1x, @2x and @3x version stylesheet (default: false)
-r, --upxVersion [value] whether to generate upx version stylesheet (default: true)
-b, --baseDpr [value] set base device pixel ratio (default: 2)
-p, --upxPrecision [value] set upx value precision (default: 6)
-o, --output [path] the output file dirname
var Px2upx = require('px2upx');
var px2upxIns = new Px2upx([config]);
var originCssText = '...';
var dpr = 2;
var newCssText = px2upxIns.generateUpx(originCssText); // generate upx version stylesheet
var newCssText = px2upxIns.generateThree(originCssText, dpr); // generate @1x, @2x and @3x version stylesheet
MIT