sass-site/source/documentation/breaking-changes/bogus-combinators.md.erb

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---
title: "Breaking Change: Invalid Combinators"
introduction: >
Sass has historically been very permissive about the use of leading, trailing,
and repeated combinators in selectors. These combinators are being deprecated
except where they're useful for nesting.
---
Sass has historically supported three invalid uses of combinators:
* Leading combinators, as in `+ .error {color: red}`.
* Trailing combinators, as in `.error + {color: red}`.
* Repeated combiantors, as in `div > > .error {color: red}`.
None of these are valid CSS, and all of them will cause browsers to ignore the
style rule in question. Supporting them added a substantial amount of complexity
to Sass's implementation, and made it particularly difficult to fix various bugs
related to the `@extend` rule. As such, we [made the decision] to remove support
for these uses.
[made the decision]: https://github.com/sass/sass/issues/3340
**There is one major exception**: leading and trailing combinators may still be
used for nesting purposes. For example, the following is still very much
supported:
<% example do %>
.sidebar > {
.error {
color: red;
}
}
===
.sidebar >
.error
color: red
<% end %>
Sass will only produce an error if a selector still has a leading or trailing
combinator _after nesting is resolved_. Repeated combinators, on the other hand,
will always be errors.
To make sure existing stylesheets who (likely accidentally) contain invalid
combinators, we'll support a transition period until the next major release of
Dart Sass.
## Transition Period
<% impl_status dart: '1.54.0', libsass: false, ruby: false %>
First, we'll emit deprecation warnings for all double combinators, as well as
leading or trailing combinators that end up in selectors after nesting is
resolved.
<%= partial '../snippets/silence-deprecations' %>
In addition, we'll immediately start omitting selectors that we know to be
invalid CSS from the compiled CSS, with one exception: we _won't_ omit selectors
that begin with a leading combinator, since they may be used from a nested
`@import` rule or `meta.load-css()` mixin. However, we don't encourage this
pattern and will drop support for it in Dart Sass 2.0.0.