--- title: "Breaking Change: Slash as Division" introduction: > Sass currently treats `/` as a division operation in some contexts and a separator in others. This makes it difficult for Sass users to tell what any given `/` will mean, and makes it hard to work with new CSS features that use `/` as a separator. --- <% impl_status dart: :partial, libsass: false, ruby: false %> Today, Sass uses [complex heuristics][] to figure out whether a `/` should be treated as division or a separator. Even then, as a separator it just produces an unquoted string that's difficult to inspect from within Sass. As more and more CSS features like [CSS Grid][] and the [new `rgb()` and `hsl()` syntax][] use `/` as a separator, this is becoming more and more painful to Sass users. [complex heuristics]: ../operators/numeric#slash-separated-values [CSS Grid]: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/grid-row [new `rgb()` and `hsl()` syntax]: https://drafts.csswg.org/css-color/#rgb-functions Because Sass is a CSS superset, we're matching CSS's syntax by redefining `/` to be *only* a separator. `/` will be treated as a new type of list separator, similar to how `,` works today. Division will instead be written using the new `math.div()` function. This function will behave exactly the same as `/` does today. <% example do %> @use "sass:math"; // Future Sass, doesn't work yet! .item3 { $row: span math.div(6, 2) / 7; // A two-element slash-separated list. grid-row: $row; } === @use "sass:math" // Future Sass, doesn't work yet! .item3 $row: span math.div(6, 2) / 7 // A two-element slash-separated list. grid-row: $row === .item3 { grid-row: span 3 / 7; } <% end %> ## Transition Period <% impl_status dart: "1.33.0", libsass: false, ruby: false, feature: "math.div() and list.slash()" %> To ease the transition, we've begun by adding the `math.div()` function. The `/` operator still does division for now, but it also prints a deprecation warning when it does so. Users should switch all division to use `math.div()` instead. <% example(autogen_css: false) do %> @use "sass:math"; // WRONG, will not work in future Sass versions. @debug (12px/4px); // 3 // RIGHT, will work in future Sass versions. @debug math.div(12px, 4px); // 3 === @use "sass:math" // WRONG, will not work in future Sass versions. @debug (12px/4px) // 3 // RIGHT, will work in future Sass versions. @debug math.div(12px, 4px) // 3 <% end %> Slash-separated lists will also be available in the transition period. Because they can't be created with `/` yet, the `list.slash()` function will be added to create them. You will also be able to pass `"slash"` as the `$separator` to the [`list.join()` function][] and the [`list.append()` function][]. [`list.join()` function]: ../modules/list#join [`list.append()` function]: ../modules/list#append <% example do %> @use "sass:list"; @use "sass:math"; .item3 { $row: list.slash(span math.div(6, 2), 7); grid-row: $row; } === @use "sass:list" @use "sass:math" .item3 $row: list.slash(span math.div(6, 2), 7) grid-row: $row === .item3 { grid-row: span 3 / 7; } <% end %> ## Automatic Migration You can use [the Sass migrator][] to automatically update your stylesheets to use `math.div()` and `list.slash()`. [the Sass migrator]: https://github.com/sass/migrator#readme ```shellsession $ npm install -g sass-migrator $ sass-migrator division **/*.scss ```