Based on our record, Etsy Hound should be more popular than PurifyCSS. It has been mentiond 10 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
PurgeCSS analyzes your HTML and internally keeps track of which selectors are being used or not. PurgeCSS actually analyzes other types of files besides HTML for selectors, such as template files and JavaScript. This feature is what makes PurgeCSS different from a similar solution, UnCSS, and related to a 'predecessor' solution called PurifyCSS. More on both of those later on. - Source: dev.to / about 2 years ago
> Isn't there a process of reducing it to only what one needs? Yes there is: https://github.com/purifycss/purifycss. - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
Check out purifycss, I’m not sure if it works with scss though. Source: about 3 years ago
The same algorithm is also used in Hound (https://github.com/hound-search/hound You really should check it out if you haven't already. It's incredibly useful; I used it all the time. Not open source though. - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
Agreed, I already have Hound setup to search across all the different repos I pull from (bitbucket, gh, gitlab, gitea etc) but now I need to find a docker equivalent. Source: about 1 year ago
I know you're looking for first-party tools that is part of the whole package, but hound does this fantastically and is extremely easy to setup, and is ridiculously fast. Source: about 1 year ago
Hound is an excellent implementation of this for code search: https://github.com/hound-search/hound. - Source: Hacker News / about 1 year ago
If the docs are generated from comments in the code a simple ripgrep search of the source (with fzf or other integration) will find things just as well too. Hound is a nice little web UI that does this: https://github.com/hound-search/hound. - Source: Hacker News / about 2 years ago
Unused CSS - Easily find and remove unused CSS rules
Sourcegraph - Sourcegraph is a free, self-hosted code search and intelligence server that helps developers find, review, understand, and debug code. Use it with any Git code host for teams from 1 to 10,000+.
Purgecss - Easily remove unused CSS
OpenGrok - OpenGrok is a fast and usable source code search and cross reference engine.
PostCSS - Increase code readability. Add vendor prefixes to CSS rules using values from Can I Use. Autoprefixer will use the data based on current browser popularity and property support to apply prefixes for you.
Atlassian Fisheye - With FishEye you can search code, visualize and report on activity and find for commits, files, revisions, or teammates across SVN, Git, Mercurial, CVS and Perforce.