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124 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
124 lines
5.9 KiB
Markdown
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---
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title: A Change in Plans for Sass 3.3
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author: Natalie Weizenbaum
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date: 2013-12-19 20:05 PST
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---
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_This was originally published as [a gist](https://gist.github.com/nex3/8050187)._
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Sass 3.3 is coming soon, and along with it several major new features. It
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supports source maps, SassScript maps, and the use of `&` in SassScript. In
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preparation for its release, we've put out a couple of release candidates to be
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sure that everything was set and ready to go. Unfortunately, it wasn't.
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Release candidates often turn up small bugs and inconsistencies in new features,
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but it's rare that they find anything truly damning. In this case, though,
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several users noticed an issue with using `&` in SassScript that rendered a
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sizable chunk of our plan for that section of 3.3 unworkable. It's not a fatal
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issue, and we think we have a good plan for dealing with it (I'll get to that in
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a bit), but it is a problem.
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## The Background
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To understand what's wrong, first you need to understand the reason we decided
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to make `&` accessible to SassScript in the first place. One thing users want to
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do pretty often is to add suffixes to classes. Sometimes this takes the place of
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nesting selectors, sometimes it's just to make a new class based on the old ones
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-- the reason doesn't matter much to this discussion. When people tried to do
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this, they'd write something like `.foo { &-suffix { ... } }`, and it wouldn't
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work. The reason is that `&` has the same syntactic function as a type selector
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(e.g. `h1`) or a universal selector (`*`), since it could be replaced by any of
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those. It doesn't make sense to write `*-suffix` in a selector, so `&-suffix`
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wasn't allowed either.
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This didn't stop people from wanting to do it, though. So we decided, "all
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right, we already use interpolation (`#{}`) to support injecting text into
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selectors -- let's just use that". We decided to add `&` as a sort of special
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variable in SassScript that contained a parsed representation of the current
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selector. You could then mimic `&-suffix` by doing `@at-root #{&}-suffix`
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instead[^1]. Life was peachy, until our intrepid users discovered the problem.
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## The Problem
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Here's a small snippet of SCSS that demonstrates the issue. See if you can
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figure it out:
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```scss
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.foo, .bar {
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@at-root #{&}-suffix {
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color: blue;
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}
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}
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```
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Did you get it? That's right: `&` in this example is `.foo, .bar`, which means
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the selector compiles to `.foo, .bar-suffix`. Since `#{}` injects plain old
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text, there's no chance for Sass to figure out how it should split up the
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selector.
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[Chris](https://github.com/chriseppstein) and I talked and talked about how to
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fix this. We considered adding a function to add the suffix, but that was too
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verbose. We considered making `&` split the compilation of the CSS rule into
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several parallel rules which each had a single selector for `&`, but that was
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too complicated and fell down in too many edge cases. We eventually concluded
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that there was no way for SassScript `&` to cleanly support the use case we
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designed it for.
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## The Solution
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We knew we wanted to support the `&-suffix` use case, and our clever plan for
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doing so had failed. We put our heads together and discussed, and decided that
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the best way to support it was the most straightforward: we'd just allow
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`&-suffix`. This was, after all, what most people tried first when they wanted
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this behavior, and with the `&` embedded directly in the selector, we can handle
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selector lists easily.
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This means that **`&-suffix` will be supported in Sass 3.3**, without needing
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`#{}` or `@at-root`. I've created [issue
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1055](https://github.com/nex3/sass/issues/1055) to track it. When compiling
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these selectors, if the parent selector is one that would result in an invalid
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selector (e.g. `*-suffix` or `:nth-child(1)-suffix`), we'll throw an error there
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describing why that selector was generated.
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We are still worried about cases where people write mixins using `&-suffix` that
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will then fail to work with certain parent selectors, but in this case we
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determined that this would be the least of all available evils.
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## The Future of `&` in SassScript
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In addition to supporting `&-suffix`, **we've decided to pull SassScript `&`
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from the 3.3 release**. Rest assured that it will return -- we recognize that it
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has other good use cases, and we intend to bring it back for the next big
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release (likely 3.4). In addition, it will come with a suite of functions for
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manipulating the selectors it makes available, so it will be more powerful than
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ever.
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There are two reasons that we want to hold off on using `&` in SassScript for
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now. The first is that we want some time to create the functions that will go
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along with it and put them through their paces. This may require changing the
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way it works in various ways, and we don't want to have to make
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backwards-incompatible changes to do so.
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The second reason is that we've spent a fair amount of energy talking up `#{&}`
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as a solution to the `&-suffix` problem. This is our own fault, clearly, but
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it's true and it's something we need to deal with. Making `&-suffix` work is
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great, but if everyone is using `#{&}` anyway because that's what we told them
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about a few months ago, then it's not doing everything it can. Having a release
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where `&-suffix` works but `#{&}` doesn't will help guide users towards the best
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way to solve their problem, before we make the more advanced functionality
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available.
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`@at-root` will still be included in Sass 3.3.
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## Releasing 3.3
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Unfortunately, this change will delay the release of 3.3, but hopefully not by
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too much. I anticipate this being relatively straightforward to implement; the
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major hurdle was figuring out what to do about it, and that part's done. I plan
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to devote a large chunk of time to getting 3.3 out the door after I come back
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from winter vacation, so hopefully (no promises) it'll be released some time in
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January.
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[^1]: The `@at-root` is necessary since Sass can't reliably figure out whether
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`&` was used in the selector like it can when `&` is used without `#{}`.
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