mirror of
https://github.com/danog/sass-site.git
synced 2024-11-27 12:35:03 +01:00
837a475ddd
Logdown seems to be basically unmaintained, its servers are unreliable, and it's been causing some mixed-content errors lately. This moves all blog posts to sass-lang.com itself; I'll set up redirects from the blog as best I can once this lands. Closes #401 Closes #402 Closes #403
91 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
91 lines
4.7 KiB
Markdown
---
|
|
title: Sass 3.4 is Released
|
|
author: Natalie Weizenbaum
|
|
date: 2014-08-18 16:38 PST
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
We've been trying to increase the pace of Sass releases, and it looks like we've
|
|
succeeded. A mere five months after the release of [Sass
|
|
3.3](/blog/sass-33-is-released), we're announcing the release of Sass 3.4.0,
|
|
codename Selective Steve. Faster releases mean fewer major features per release,
|
|
so there are only two big new things to talk about (although there are plenty of
|
|
little improvements you can read about in [the
|
|
changelog](/documentation/file.SASS_CHANGELOG.html)). As the version name
|
|
suggests, both of these features have to do with selectors.
|
|
|
|
# Using `&` in SassScript
|
|
|
|
"SassScript" is what we call the mini-language Sass uses for variables, property
|
|
values, and so forth. It's mostly just CSS values, but it also supports custom
|
|
functions, arithmetic, and so forth. In Sass 3.4, we added support for something
|
|
new: the parent selector, `&`.
|
|
|
|
Most Sass users will probably recognize `&` from its previous appearances in
|
|
selectors around the world, where it's used to explicitly refer to the parent
|
|
selector. For example, in `.parent { .child & { ... } }`, `&` refers to
|
|
`.parent`, and this compiles to `.child .parent { ... }`.
|
|
|
|
Now `&` works much the same way in SassScript. It refers to the same parent
|
|
selector, but instead of just being dropped in it's exposed as a list of lists
|
|
to make it easy for functions to inspect and manipulate it. For example, if you
|
|
write `.foo .bar, .baz { $selector: & }`, `$selector` will be `((".foo" ".bar"),
|
|
(".baz",))`.
|
|
|
|
We had originally slated this feature for version 3.3, but we took it out when
|
|
we realized [it was really hard to use these selectors in a way that didn't
|
|
break when they contained commas](/blog/a-change-in-plans-for-sass-33).
|
|
Because of that, we decided to delay it for a version to give us time to come up
|
|
with its compantion feature: selector functions.
|
|
|
|
# Selector Functions
|
|
|
|
The problem with just exposing `&` was that the only way to use it with other
|
|
selectors was by glomming them together as strings. This works okay in simple
|
|
cases, but when you write `#{$selector} .child` and `$selector` is `.foo, .bar`,
|
|
you want `.foo .child, .bar .child` but you get `.foo, .bar .child`. This is no
|
|
good at all.
|
|
|
|
To solve this, we added a slew of functions that use Sass's powerful built-in
|
|
selector logic to do the right thing. For example, you can now write
|
|
**`selector-nest(".foo, .bar", ".child")`** and get exactly what you want. These
|
|
functions all return the same sort of nested-list representation that `&`
|
|
uses,but they're very liberal in what they accept: anything from nested lists to
|
|
plain old strings.
|
|
|
|
If you want to see every selector function we thought up, check out [the
|
|
changelog](/documentation/file.SASS_CHANGELOG.html). I do want to highlight a
|
|
few that I'm particularly fond of, though. You've already seen
|
|
`selector-nest()`, and **`selector-append()`** is a close relative. The
|
|
difference between them is whitespace: `selector-nest()` adds a space between
|
|
its selectors, where `selector-append()` doesn't. This means that
|
|
`selector-append(".foo, .bar", "-suffix")` returns `.foo-suffix, .bar-suffix`.
|
|
|
|
Another function I like a lot is **`selector-replace()`**. This does a
|
|
search-and-replace of one selector within another, but it's a lot more clever
|
|
than your basic string replace. It uses Sass's `@extend` logic to replace
|
|
selectors *semantically*, as though every element matched by the replacement
|
|
selector was also matched by the replaced selector. For example,
|
|
`selector-replace(".foo.bar.baz", ".foo.baz", ".qux")` returns `.bar.qux`.
|
|
|
|
The last really powerful function I want to draw your attention to is
|
|
**`selector-unify()`**. This takes two selectors and returns a new selector that
|
|
matches only elements that are matched by *both* input selectors. This is an
|
|
operation Sass uses a lot internally, and now users can access it as well. For
|
|
example, `selector-unify(".foo.bar", ".bar.baz")` will return `.foo.bar.baz`.
|
|
|
|
# What's Next?
|
|
|
|
I won't rule out the possibility of Sass 3.5 existing, but
|
|
[Chris](https://twitter.com/chriseppstein) and I plan to focus pretty hard on
|
|
Sass 4.0. The big feature for 4.0 is going to be `@import`, or rather the lack
|
|
thereof. Our current import system is beginning to show its age in a major way,
|
|
and we intend to replace it wholesale, up to and including the name. As of 4.0,
|
|
the recommended way of pulling in other Sass files will be `@use`.
|
|
|
|
Among the features we're planning for `@use` are two that have been widely
|
|
requested. You'll be able to import CSS stylesheets directly into your Sass
|
|
ones, and each stylesheet will only be run once, no matter how many times it's
|
|
imported.
|
|
|
|
Until then, though, run `gem update sass` and enjoy Selective Steve!
|