* drop empty lines when diffing output
* replace expected css with optimized lightningcss output
Lightning CSS generates a more optimal CSS output.
Right now the tests are setup in a way that both the generated css and
expected css are run through `lightningcss` to make sure that the output
is concistent for the `stable` and `oxide` engines. But this also means
that the expected output _could_ be larger (aka not optimized) and still
matches (after it runs through lightningcss).
By replacing this with the more optimal output we achieve a few things:
1. This better reflects reality since we will be using `lightningcss`.
2. This gets rid of unnecessary css.
3. Removed code!
* 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>
* Fix context reuse test
* Don't update files with at-apply when content changes
* Prevent at-apply directives from creating new contexts
* Rework apply to use local postcss root
We were storing user CSS in the context so we could use it with apply. The problem is that this CSS does not get updated on save unless it has a tailwind directive in it resulting in stale apply caches. This could result in either stale generation or errors about missing classes.
* Don’t build local cache unless `@apply` is used
* Update changelog
* move `./tests/jit` to `./tests`
* make tests consistent
Abstracted a `run` function and some syntax highlighting helpers for
`html`, `css` and `javascript`.