--- title: Structure of a Stylesheet table_of_contents: true introduction: > Just like CSS, most Sass stylesheets are mainly made up of style rules that contain property declarations. But Sass stylesheets have many more features that can exist alongside these. --- ## Statements A Sass stylesheet is made up of a series of *statements*, which are evaluated in order to build the resulting CSS. Some statements may have *blocks*, defined using `{` and `}`, which contain other statements. For example, a style rule is a statement with a block. That block contains other statements, such as property declarations. In SCSS, statements are separated by semicolons (which are optional if the statement uses a block). In the indented syntax, they're just separated by newlines. ### Universal Statements These types of statements can be used anywhere in a Sass stylesheet: * [Variable declarations](../variables), like `$var: value`. * [Flow control at-rules](../at-rules/control), like `@if` and `@each`. * The [`@error`](../at-rules/error), [`@warn`](../at-rules/warn), and [`@debug`](../at-rules/debug) rules. ### CSS Statements These statements produce CSS. They can be used anywhere except within a `@function`: * [Style rules](../style-rules), like `h1 { /* ... */ }`. * [CSS at-rules](../at-rules/css), like `@media` and `@font-face`. * [Mixin uses](../at-rules/mixin) using `@include`. * The [`@at-root` rule](../at-rules/at-root). ### Top-Level Statements These statements can only be used at the top level of a stylesheet, or nested within a CSS statement at the top level: * [Module loads](../at-rules/use), using `@use`. * [Imports](../at-rules/import), using `@import`. * [Mixin definitions](../at-rules/mixin) using `@mixin`. * [Function definitions](../at-rules/function) using `@function`. ### Other Statements * [Property declarations](../style-rules/declarations) like `width: 100px` may only be used within style rules and some CSS at-rules. * The [`@extend` rule](../at-rules/extend) may only be used within style rules. ## Expressions An *expression* is anything that goes on the right-hand side of a property or variable declaration. Each expression produces a *[value][]*. Any valid CSS property value is also a Sass expression, but Sass expressions are much more powerful than plain CSS values. They're passed as arguments to [mixins][] and [functions][], used for control flow with the [`@if` rule][], and manipulated using [arithmetic][]. We call Sass's expression syntax *SassScript*. [value]: ../values [mixins]: ../at-rules/mixin [functions]: ../at-rules/function [`@if` rule]: ../at-rules/control/if [arithmetic]: ../operators/numeric ### Literals The simplest expressions just represent static values: * [Numbers](../values/numbers), which may or may not have units, like `12` or `100px`. * [Strings](../values/strings), which may or may not have quotes, like `"Helvetica Neue"` or `bold`. * [Colors](../values/colors), which can be referred to by their hex representation or by name, like `#c6538c` or `blue`. * The [boolean](../values/booleans) literals `true` or `false`. * The singleton [`null`](../values/null). * [Lists of values](../values/lists), which may be separated by spaces or commas and which may be enclosed in square brackets or no brackets at all, like `1.5em 1em 0 2em`, `Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif`, or `[col1-start]`. * [Maps](../values/maps) that associate values with keys, like `("background": red, "foreground": pink)`. ### Operations Sass defines syntax for a number of operations: <%= partial 'documentation/snippets/operator-list', locals: {parens: true} %> ### Other Expressions * [Variables](../variables), like `$var`. * [Function calls](../at-rules/function), like `nth($list, 1)` or `var(--main-bg-color)`, which may call Sass core library functions or user-defined functions, or which may be compiled directly to CSS. * [Special functions](special-functions), like `calc(1px + 100%)` or `url(http://myapp.com/assets/logo.png)`, that have their own unique parsing rules. * [The parent selector](../style-rules/parent-selector), `&`. * The value `!important`, which is parsed as an unquoted string.