MiniCSS is a Ruby implementation of the CSS Syntax Level 3 tokenizer, parser, serializer, and selector toolkit. It provides fast, dependency-free primitives for building linters, minifiers, and other CSS-aware tooling.
- C tokenizer and parser for Ruby 3.4+.
- Battle-tested against the JSON-based css-parsing-testssuite for standards-compliant parsing.
- High-level AST wrappers (MiniCSS::AST::Rule,Decl,AtRule,Function,Number, and more) ready for programmatic inspection.
- Bidirectional selector helpers (MiniCSS::Sel) for tokenizing, walking, computing specificity, and turning selector ASTs back into strings.
- Serializer that converts AST nodes back into normalized CSS, enabling round-tripping and rewrites.
- Accepts either strings or IO objects, with optional Unicode range
tokenization via allow_unicode_ranges.
Add MiniCSS to your project with Bundler:
bundle add minicssOr install it directly:
gem install minicssrequire "minicss"
css = <<~CSS
  @media (min-width: 768px) {
    .button.primary {
      color: #fff;
      background: rgb(0 0 0 / 80%);
    }
  }
CSS
sheet = MiniCSS.parse(css)
sheet.each do |node|
  case node
  when MiniCSS::AST::AtRule
    puts "At-rule: @#{node.name} #{MiniCSS.serialize(node.prelude)}"
    node.child_rules.each { puts "  Child: #{MiniCSS.serialize(_1)}" }
  when MiniCSS::AST::Rule
    selector = MiniCSS::Sel.stringify(node.selector)
    puts "Rule: #{selector}"
    node.decls.each do |decl|
      value = MiniCSS.serialize(decl.value)
      important = decl.important? ? " !important" : ""
      puts "  #{decl.name}: #{value}#{important}"
    end
  when MiniCSS::AST::SyntaxError
    warn "Syntax error: #{node.reason}"
  end
endtokens = MiniCSS.tokenize(".btn { color: #fff; }")
tokens.map { |token| [token.kind, token.literal] }
# => [[:delim, "."], [:ident, "btn"], [:whitespace, " "], [:left_curly, "{"],
#     [:whitespace, " "], [:ident, "color"], [:colon, ":"], [:whitespace, " "],
#     [:hash, "#fff"], [:semicolon, ";"], [:whitespace, " "], [:right_curly, "}"]]
unicode_tokens = MiniCSS.tokenize("div { content: U+4E00-9FFF; }", allow_unicode_ranges: true)Every token carries positional information via token.pos_start and
token.pos_end, making it easy to surface diagnostics.
selector_ast = MiniCSS::Sel.parse("button#primary.action:hover")
MiniCSS::Sel.specificity(selector_ast)
# => [1, 2, 1]
MiniCSS::Sel.walk(selector_ast) do |token, parent|
  puts "#{token[:type]} → #{token[:content]}"
end
# id → #primary
# class → .action
# pseudo-class → :hover
# type → button
MiniCSS::Sel.stringify(selector_ast)
# => "button#primary.action:hover"Selectors are represented as nested hashes and arrays, mirroring the structure
produced by Lea Verou’s parsel, which MiniCSS::Sel is based on.
MiniCSS.serialize accepts any AST node (or array of nodes) returned by
MiniCSS.parse:
ast = MiniCSS.parse(".card { margin: 1rem; padding: 1rem; }")
MiniCSS.serialize(ast)
# => ".card{margin:1rem;padding:1rem;}"This makes it easy to transform stylesheets and emit normalized output.
When the parser encounters invalid input it emits MiniCSS::AST::SyntaxError
nodes alongside the rest of the AST:
errors = MiniCSS.parse("p { color: }").grep(MiniCSS::AST::SyntaxError)
errors.each { warn _1.reason }
# Syntax error details, including source offsets, are preserved from the tokenizer.You can introspect the original token stream to report accurate diagnostics.
- Clone the repository, and run git submodule update --initto fetch the required fixtures.
- Install dependencies: bundle install
- Compile native extensions: bundle exec rake compile
- Run the test suite: bundle exec rspec
- Check style and linting: bundle exec rubocop
- Run everything: bundle exec rake
Helpful utilities:
- bin/consolestarts an IRB session with MiniCSS preloaded.
- bin/gen-specs.rbregenerates the specs under- spec/parsing_testsfrom the external- css-parsing-testsfixtures.
- benchmarks/ruby_prof.rbruns tokenization, parsing, and serialization against ruby-prof for spotting slow code.
- benchmarks/stylesheet.rbruns a benchmark for each parsing and serialization step against Crass.
- benchmarks/selectors.rbruns a benchmark for selector parsing, serialization, and specificity.
As MiniCSS now relies on C extensions for performance, comparisons below are not really fair, considering Crass is a pure-ruby solution. However, MiniCSS provides support for extra CSS features and a different way of handling ASTs.
Results below are running MiniCSS and Crass on the Bootstrap 4 CSS on both minified and unminified versions:
Warning
MiniCSS uses C extension for full tokenization. Comparisons below are not fair.
== Tokenize bootstrap-4.css ==
ruby 3.4.5 (2025-07-16 revision 20cda200d3) +PRISM [arm64-darwin24]
Warming up --------------------------------------
    MiniCSS tokenize     3.000 i/100ms
      Crass tokenize     1.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
    MiniCSS tokenize     31.449 (± 3.2%) i/s   (31.80 ms/i) -    159.000 in   5.058992s
      Crass tokenize     12.731 (± 0.0%) i/s   (78.55 ms/i) -     64.000 in   5.036126s
Comparison:
    MiniCSS tokenize:       31.4 i/s
      Crass tokenize:       12.7 i/s - 2.47x  slower
== Tokenize bootstrap-4.min.css ==
ruby 3.4.5 (2025-07-16 revision 20cda200d3) +PRISM [arm64-darwin24]
Warming up --------------------------------------
    MiniCSS tokenize     4.000 i/100ms
      Crass tokenize     1.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
    MiniCSS tokenize     39.820 (± 2.5%) i/s   (25.11 ms/i) -    200.000 in   5.026530s
      Crass tokenize     15.902 (± 6.3%) i/s   (62.89 ms/i) -     80.000 in   5.036493s
Comparison:
    MiniCSS tokenize:       39.8 i/s
      Crass tokenize:       15.9 i/s - 2.50x  slower
Note
MiniCSS uses a pure-ruby implementation for this section, except for the
TokenStream class, which relies on a C extension.
== Parse bootstrap-4.css ==
ruby 3.4.5 (2025-07-16 revision 20cda200d3) +PRISM [arm64-darwin24]
Warming up --------------------------------------
       MiniCSS parse     1.000 i/100ms
         Crass parse     1.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
       MiniCSS parse      7.837 (± 0.0%) i/s  (127.61 ms/i) -     40.000 in   5.105947s
         Crass parse      8.554 (±11.7%) i/s  (116.90 ms/i) -     43.000 in   5.061931s
Comparison:
         Crass parse:        8.6 i/s
       MiniCSS parse:        7.8 i/s - same-ish: difference falls within error
== Parse bootstrap-4.min.css ==
ruby 3.4.5 (2025-07-16 revision 20cda200d3) +PRISM [arm64-darwin24]
Warming up --------------------------------------
       MiniCSS parse     1.000 i/100ms
         Crass parse     1.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
       MiniCSS parse     10.086 (± 0.0%) i/s   (99.15 ms/i) -     51.000 in   5.058562s
         Crass parse     11.333 (± 0.0%) i/s   (88.24 ms/i) -     57.000 in   5.035570s
Comparison:
         Crass parse:       11.3 i/s
       MiniCSS parse:       10.1 i/s - 1.12x  slower
Note
MiniCSS uses a pure-ruby implementaiton for this section. No C extensions are leveraged.
== Serialize bootstrap-4.css ==
ruby 3.4.5 (2025-07-16 revision 20cda200d3) +PRISM [arm64-darwin24]
Warming up --------------------------------------
   MiniCSS serialize    26.000 i/100ms
     Crass stringify    13.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
   MiniCSS serialize    267.680 (± 1.1%) i/s    (3.74 ms/i) -      1.352k in   5.051372s
     Crass stringify    134.551 (± 3.0%) i/s    (7.43 ms/i) -    676.000 in   5.028420s
Comparison:
   MiniCSS serialize:      267.7 i/s
     Crass stringify:      134.6 i/s - 1.99x  slower
== Serialize bootstrap-4.min.css ==
ruby 3.4.5 (2025-07-16 revision 20cda200d3) +PRISM [arm64-darwin24]
Warming up --------------------------------------
   MiniCSS serialize    26.000 i/100ms
     Crass stringify    18.000 i/100ms
Calculating -------------------------------------
   MiniCSS serialize    255.343 (± 5.1%) i/s    (3.92 ms/i) -      1.300k in   5.105550s
     Crass stringify    181.703 (± 5.0%) i/s    (5.50 ms/i) -    918.000 in   5.065818s
Comparison:
   MiniCSS serialize:      255.3 i/s
     Crass stringify:      181.7 i/s - 1.41x  slower
Bug reports, feature requests, and pull requests are welcome. By participating you agree to abide by the project’s Code of Conduct (see CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md). Please include tests whenever you add or change behavior.
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2025 Vito Sartori
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER
LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM,
OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
THE SOFTWARE.