I recently ran into a strange error where a selector stopped working after minification (using csswring 3.0.7). The selector in question matches elements where a data-property includes a hyphen. It worked in development but failed in production on all browsers tested (Chrome, Firefox, IE11, Edge).
After looking through the minified stylesheet, I found that the selector had been transformed from something like [data-attr*="-"]
to [data-attr*=-]
. Quotes have been removed and this is rejected by the browsers.
The thing is, I can't find any source that says a single hyphen requires quotes. Obviously the minifier-authors has found the same sources I have.
This page details the relevant parts of the specification.
So, a valid unquoted attribute value in CSS is any string of text that is not the empty string, consists of escaped characters and/or characters matching
/[-_\u00A0-\u10FFFF]/
entirely, and doesn’t start with a digit or two hyphens or a hyphen followed by a digit.
A single hyphen seems perfectly valid in this case.
Here is a jsfiddle testing different scenarios. Only when trying to match exactly a single, unquoted hyphen does the selector fail.
Am I missing something? Shouldn't this be a valid selector?