Extract the CSS from an HTML document.
npm install extract-css
> Extract the CSS from an HTML document.
Install with npm
```
npm install --save extract-css
`js
var extractCss = require('extract-css');
var options = {
url: './',
applyStyleTags: true,
removeStyleTags: true,
applyLinkTags: true,
removeLinkTags: true,
preserveMediaQueries: false
};
extractCss(document, options, function (err, html, css) {
console.log(html);
console.log(css);
});
`
#### options.applyStyleTags
Type: Boolean
Whether to inline styles in .
#### options.applyLinkTags
Type: Boolean
Whether to resolve tags and inline the resulting styles.
#### options.removeStyleTags
Type: Boolean
Whether to remove the original tags after (possibly) inlining the css from them.
#### options.removeLinkTags
Type: Boolean
Whether to remove the original tags after (possibly) inlining the css from them.
#### options.url
Type: String
How to resolve hrefs. Required.
#### options.preserveMediaQueries
Type: Boolean
Preserves all media queries (and contained styles) within tags as a refinement when removeStyleTags is true. Other styles are removed.
#### options.codeBlocks
Type: Object { EJS: { start: '<%', end: '%>' }, HBS: { start: '{{', end: '}}' } }
Default:
An object where each value has a start and end to specify fenced code blocks that should be ignored during parsing. For example, Handlebars (hbs) templates are HBS: {start: '{{', end: '}}'}. Note that codeBlocks is a dictionary which can contain many different code blocks, so don't do codeBlocks: {...} do codeBlocks.myBlock = {...}`.
#### data-embed
When a data-embed attribute is present on a tag, extract-css will not inline the styles and will not remove the tags.
This can be used to embed email client support hacks that rely on css selectors into your email templates.
The code for this module was originally taken from the Juice library.
MIT © Jonathan Kemp