In current project, I was asked for compressing the HTML class attribute and corresponding CSS selectors before deployment. For example, the code on
There is also gulp-selectors.
Install it:
npm install gulp gulp-selectors
Now a quick-and-dirty node
script:
var gulp = require('gulp');
var gs = require('gulp-selectors');
gulp
.src(['*.html', '*.css'])
.pipe(gs.run({}, '{ids: "*"}'))
.pipe(gulp.dest('.'))'
The second argument to gs.run()
is in order for it to leave IDs as-is, see also its website: https://www.npmjs.com/package/gulp-selectors
There's nothing wrong with minification with gzipping, even before modern browsers introduced source maps, minification was a best practice because you can still get some significant savings even when used in conjunction with gzipping. We put up with worse readability on production because the performance improvement was worth it. Now with source maps, we can have our cake and eat it too. Here's a good article demonstrating the effects of combining minification with gzip on html pages for large sites: http://madskristensen.net/post/effects-of-gzipping-vs-minifying-html-files
The difference in savings you get varies very greatly depending on the glyph distribution of the code being minified, so results will vary depending on the minification strategy and the language being minified, and even just depending on coding style. In the average case the savings are still significant.
Minification handles more than just condensing glyphs, it can also restructure the code to remove unneeded characters while achieving the same effect, something that gzipping can't do.
Now, to get back to your specific question, in your case, you want to minify class glyphs. This is harder to do for several reasons. The scoping of those glyphs are between several files, as opposed to it being possible to scope them to local parts of one file. When minifying javascript, global scope variables do not get replaced by default because they may be needed in another script, but with CSS, you don't know what classes are local and which may be defined in another file. To make matters worse, you also need to sync the class replacement to javascript as well, as it's very common to find DOM elements in code via classes. It would be impossible to sync this, as classes may be constructed dynamically in javascript, and even without that issue, it would be a huge ordeal. You can only sync the glyph replacement in javascript if you change your coding style to make sure you explicitly identify where css class strings are being used: https://code.google.com/p/closure-stylesheets/#Renaming
Luckily, glyph replacement is the thing that minification does that gzipping also does very very well, so the size savings from that particular minification strategy is much much less than the other strategies which remove glyphs entirely.
There is also a project called "rename-css-selectors" if you handle the code with node:
https://www.npmjs.com/package/rename-css-selectors
There are plugins for nearly every build tool (webpack, parcel, gulp, ...):
https://github.com/JPeer264/node-rcs-core#plugins
This will minify all CSS selectors in HTML, JS and CSS files (actually any file you want). I saved 20ish% of the CSS filesize at the end.
This is amazingly short-sighted.
If you really want to rename class names (keeping in mind what Madmartigan said) Google Closure Stylesheets does that. It's an overkill, and YUI Compressor or any other minification + gzipping tool should give you enough performance boost, but it can do it. You'll have to use other Closure tools to make appropriate changes to your .js
files and html templates.
There is plugin https://github.com/vreshch/optimize-css-classnames-plugin Work as Webpack Loader. That might work in most of cases