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404 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
---
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title: Sass Basics
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introduction: >
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Before you can use Sass, you need to set it up on your project. If you want to
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just browse here, go ahead, but we recommend you go install Sass first. [Go
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here](/install) if you want to learn how to get everything setup.
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---
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- content_for :navigation do
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%h3 Topics
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%nav.sl-c-list-navigation-wrapper
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:markdown
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- [Preprocessing](#topic-1)
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- [Variables](#topic-2)
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- [Nesting](#topic-3)
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- [Partials](#topic-4)
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- [Import](#topic-5)
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- [Mixins](#topic-6)
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- [Inheritance](#topic-7)
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- [Operators](#topic-8)
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- [Lists](#topic-9)
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%section#topic-1
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:markdown
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## Preprocessing
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CSS on its own can be fun, but stylesheets are getting larger, more
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complex, and harder to maintain. This is where a preprocessor can help.
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Sass lets you use features that don't exist in CSS yet like variables,
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nesting, mixins, inheritance and other nifty goodies that make writing CSS
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fun again.
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Once you start tinkering with Sass, it will take your preprocessed Sass
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file and save it as a normal CSS file that you can use in your website.
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The most direct way to make this happen is in your terminal. Once Sass is
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installed, you can compile your Sass to CSS using the `sass` command.
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You'll need to tell Sass which file to build from, and where to output CSS
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to. For example, running `sass input.scss output.css` from your terminal
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would take a single Sass file, `input.scss`, and compile that file to
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`output.css`.
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You can also watch individual files or directories with the `--watch`
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flag. The watch flag tells Sass to watch your source files for changes,
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and re-compile CSS each time you save your Sass. If you wanted to watch
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(instead of manually build) your `input.scss` file, you'd just add the
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watch flag to your command, like so:
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sass --watch input.scss output.css
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You can watch and output to directories by using folder paths as your
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input and output, and separating them with a colon. In this example:
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= partial 'code-snippets/homepage-sass-watch'
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:markdown
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Sass would watch all files in the `app/sass` folder for changes, and
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compile CSS to the `public/stylesheets` folder.
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---
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%section#topic-2
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:markdown
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## Variables
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Think of variables as a way to store information that you want to reuse
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throughout your stylesheet. You can store things like colors, font stacks,
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or any CSS value you think you'll want to reuse. Sass uses the `$` symbol
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to make something a variable. Here's an example:
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- example do
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:plain
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$font-stack: Helvetica, sans-serif;
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$primary-color: #333;
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body {
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font: 100% $font-stack;
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color: $primary-color;
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}
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===
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$font-stack: Helvetica, sans-serif
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$primary-color: #333
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body
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font: 100% $font-stack
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color: $primary-color
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:markdown
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When the Sass is processed, it takes the variables we define for the
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`$font-stack` and `$primary-color` and outputs normal CSS with our
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variable values placed in the CSS. This can be extremely powerful when
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working with brand colors and keeping them consistent throughout the site.
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---
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%section#topic-3
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:markdown
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## Nesting
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When writing HTML you've probably noticed that it has a clear nested and
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visual hierarchy. CSS, on the other hand, doesn't.
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Sass will let you nest your CSS selectors in a way that follows the same
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visual hierarchy of your HTML. Be aware that overly nested rules will
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result in over-qualified CSS that could prove hard to maintain and is
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generally considered bad practice.
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With that in mind, here's an example of some typical styles for a site's
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navigation:
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- example do
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:plain
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nav {
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ul {
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margin: 0;
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padding: 0;
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list-style: none;
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}
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li { display: inline-block; }
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a {
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display: block;
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padding: 6px 12px;
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text-decoration: none;
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}
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}
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===
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nav
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ul
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margin: 0
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padding: 0
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list-style: none
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li
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display: inline-block
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a
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display: block
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padding: 6px 12px
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text-decoration: none
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:markdown
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You'll notice that the `ul`, `li`, and `a` selectors are nested inside the
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`nav` selector. This is a great way to organize your CSS and make it more
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readable.
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---
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%section#topic-4
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:markdown
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## Partials
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You can create partial Sass files that contain little snippets of CSS that
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you can include in other Sass files. This is a great way to modularize
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your CSS and help keep things easier to maintain. A partial is simply a
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Sass file named with a leading underscore. You might name it something
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like `_partial.scss`. The underscore lets Sass know that the file is only
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a partial file and that it should not be generated into a CSS file. Sass
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partials are used with the `@import` directive.
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---
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%section#topic-5
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:markdown
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## Import
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CSS has an import option that lets you split your CSS into smaller, more
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maintainable portions. The only drawback is that each time you use
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`@import` in CSS it creates another HTTP request. Sass builds on top of
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the current CSS `@import` but instead of requiring an HTTP request, Sass
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will take the file that you want to import and combine it with the file
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you're importing into so you can serve a single CSS file to the web browser.
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Let's say you have a couple of Sass files, `_reset.scss` and `base.scss`.
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We want to import `_reset.scss` into `base.scss`.
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- example do
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:plain
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// _reset.scss
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html,
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body,
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ul,
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ol {
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margin: 0;
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padding: 0;
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}
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---
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// base.scss
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@import 'reset';
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body {
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font: 100% Helvetica, sans-serif;
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background-color: #efefef;
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}
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===
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// _reset.sass
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html,
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body,
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ul,
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ol
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margin: 0
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padding: 0
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---
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// base.sass
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@import reset
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body
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font: 100% Helvetica, sans-serif
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background-color: #efefef
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===
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html,
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body,
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ul,
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ol {
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margin: 0;
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padding: 0;
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}
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body {
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font: 100% Helvetica, sans-serif;
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background-color: #efefef;
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}
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:markdown
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Notice we're using `@import 'reset';` in the `base.scss` file. When you
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import a file you don't need to include the file extension `.scss`. Sass
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is smart and will figure it out for you.
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---
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%section#topic-6
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:markdown
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## Mixins
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Some things in CSS are a bit tedious to write, especially with CSS3 and
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the many vendor prefixes that exist. A mixin lets you make groups of CSS
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declarations that you want to reuse throughout your site. You can even
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pass in values to make your mixin more flexible. A good use of a mixin is
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for vendor prefixes. Here's an example for `transform`.
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- example do
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:plain
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@mixin transform($property) {
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-webkit-transform: $property;
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-ms-transform: $property;
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transform: $property;
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}
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.box { @include transform(rotate(30deg)); }
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===
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=transform($property)
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-webkit-transform: $property
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-ms-transform: $property
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transform: $property
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.box
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+transform(rotate(30deg))
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:markdown
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To create a mixin you use the `@mixin` directive and give it a name. We've
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named our mixin `transform`. We're also using the variable `$property`
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inside the parentheses so we can pass in a transform of whatever we want.
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After you create your mixin, you can then use it as a CSS declaration
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starting with `@include` followed by the name of the mixin.
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---
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%section#topic-7
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:markdown
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## Extend/Inheritance
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This is one of the most useful features of Sass. Using `@extend` lets you
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share a set of CSS properties from one selector to another. It helps keep
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your Sass very DRY. In our example we're going to create a simple series
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of messaging for errors, warnings and successes using another feature
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which goes hand in hand with extend, placeholder classes. A placeholder
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class is a special type of class that only prints when it is extended, and
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can help keep your compiled CSS neat and clean.
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- example do
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:plain
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/* This CSS will print because %message-shared is extended. */
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%message-shared {
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border: 1px solid #ccc;
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padding: 10px;
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color: #333;
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}
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// This CSS won't print because %equal-heights is never extended.
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%equal-heights {
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display: flex;
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flex-wrap: wrap;
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}
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.message {
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@extend %message-shared;
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}
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.success {
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@extend %message-shared;
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border-color: green;
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}
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.error {
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@extend %message-shared;
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border-color: red;
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}
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.warning {
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@extend %message-shared;
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border-color: yellow;
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}
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===
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/* This CSS will print because %message-shared is extended. */
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%message-shared
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border: 1px solid #ccc
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padding: 10px
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color: #333
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// This CSS won't print because %equal-heights is never extended.
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%equal-heights
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display: flex
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flex-wrap: wrap
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.message
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@extend %message-shared
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.success
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@extend %message-shared
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border-color: green
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.error
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@extend %message-shared
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border-color: red
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.warning
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@extend %message-shared
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border-color: yellow
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:markdown
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What the above code does is tells `.message`, `.success`, `.error`, and
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`.warning` to behave just like `%message-shared`. That means anywhere that
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`%message-shared` shows up, `.message`, `.success`, `.error`, & `.warning`
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will too. The magic happens in the generated CSS, where each of these
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classes will get the same CSS properties as `%message-shared`. This helps
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you avoid having to write multiple class names on HTML elements.
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You can extend most simple CSS selectors in addition to placeholder
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classes in Sass, but using placeholders is the easiest way to make sure
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you aren't extending a class that's nested elsewhere in your styles, which
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can result in unintended selectors in your CSS.
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Note that the CSS in `%equal-heights` isn't generated, because
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`%equal-heights` is never extended.
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---
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%section#topic-8
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:markdown
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## Operators
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Doing math in your CSS is very helpful. Sass has a handful of standard
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math operators like `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, and `%`. In our example we're
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going to do some simple math to calculate widths for an `aside` &
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`article`.
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- example do
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:plain
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.container {
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width: 100%;
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}
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article[role="main"] {
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float: left;
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width: 600px / 960px * 100%;
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}
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aside[role="complementary"] {
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float: right;
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width: 300px / 960px * 100%;
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}
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===
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.container
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width: 100%
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article[role="main"]
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float: left
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width: 600px / 960px * 100%
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aside[role="complementary"]
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float: right
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width: 300px / 960px * 100%
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:markdown
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We've created a very simple fluid grid, based on 960px. Operations in Sass
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let us do something like take pixel values and convert them to percentages
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without much hassle.
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---
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