This is some bonafide CSS trickery from Harry that gives you some generic performance advice based on what it sees in your <head>
element.
First, it’s possible to make a <style>
block visible like any other element by changing the display
away from the default of none
. It’s a nice little trick. You can even do that for things in the <head>
, for example…
head,
head style,
head script {
display: block;
}
From there, Harry gets very clever with selectors, determining problematic situations from the usage and placement of certain tags. For example, say there is a <script>
that comes after some styles…
<head>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="...">
<script src="..."></script>
<title>Page Title</title>
<!-- ... -->
Well, that’s bad, because the script is blocked by CSS likely unnecessarily. Perhaps some sophisticated performance tooling software could tell you that. But you know what else can? A CSS selector!
head [rel="stylesheet"]:not([media="print"]):not(.ct) ~ script,
head style:not(:empty) ~ script {
}
That’s kinda like saying head link ~ script
, but a little fancier in that it only selects actual stylesheets or style blocks that are truly blocking (and not itself). Harry then applies styling and pseudo-content to the blocks so you can use the stylesheet as a visual performance debugging tool.
That’s just darn clever, that. The stylesheet has loads of little things you can test for, like attributes you don’t need, blocking resources, and elements that are out of order.
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