* replace `env.OXIDE` with global `__OXIDE__`
This will allow us to replace the `__OXIDE__` at build time, and fully
remove the branches from the final code so that there is not even any
reference to `@tailwindcss/oxide` on the stable engine.
* update changelog
* use `env.ENGINE` in integration tests
* drop oxide branching for the PostCSS plugin for now
This is currently a redirect to the same file, so doesn't hurt.
* Enable better dead-code elimination
* Update CLI tests
Fix indentation
* Fix indentation
---------
Co-authored-by: Jordan Pittman <jordan@cryptica.me>
* Handle group/peer variants with quoted strings
* Fix CS
* Use `splitAtTopLevelOnly` instead
This solution isn’t that pretty but it is reusing existing machinery
* inline return
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
* Fix return type
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
* Fixup
* Update changelog
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
* Run test suite against both engines
* make eslint happy
* only run `stable` tests on Node 12
* use normal expectation instead of snapshot file
When we run the tests only against `stable` (for node 12), then the
snapshots exists for the `Oxide` build. They are marked as `obsolete`
and will cause the `npm run test` script to fail. Sadly.
Inlined them for now, but ideally we make those tests more blackbox-y so
that we test that we get source maps and that we can map the sourcemap
back to the input files (without looking at the actual annotations).
* properly indent inline css
Co-authored-by: Adam Wathan <4323180+adamwathan@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
* Preserve source maps for `@apply`
* Overwrite the source for all cloned descendants
* Preserve source maps when expanding defaults
* Verify that source maps are correctly generated
* Update changelog
Default's declarations are now processed and merged even when there is no tailwind base directive included in the stylesheet. Without this applying tailwind utilities in css modules would break if they relied on defaults rules.
Co-authored-by: Robin Malfait <malfait.robin@gmail.com>
* use String.raw for css escapes
This will allow us to write code like:
```css
.mobile\:font-bold {}
```
Instead of
```css
.mobile\\:font-bold {}
```
Which resembles "real" css way better in our tests.
* use String.raw in integration tests as well
* move `./tests/jit` to `./tests`
* make tests consistent
Abstracted a `run` function and some syntax highlighting helpers for
`html`, `css` and `javascript`.