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layout | title | introduction | navigation |
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has_navigation | Sass Basics | Before you can use Sass, you need to set it up on your project. If you want to just browse here, go ahead, but we recommend you go install Sass first. [Go here](/install) if you want to learn how to get everything set up. | <h3>Topics</h3> <nav class="sl-c-list-navigation-wrapper"> - [Preprocessing](#preprocessing) - [Variables](#variables) - [Nesting](#nesting) - [Partials](#partials) - [Modules](#modules) - [Mixins](#mixins) - [Inheritance](#inheritance) - [Operators](#operators) </nav> |
Preprocessing
CSS on its own can be fun, but stylesheets are getting larger, more complex, and harder to maintain. This is where a preprocessor can help. Sass has features that don't exist in CSS yet like nesting, mixins, inheritance, and other nifty goodies that help you write robust, maintainable CSS.
Once you start tinkering with Sass, it will take your preprocessed Sass file and save it as a normal CSS file that you can use in your website.
The most direct way to make this happen is in your terminal. Once Sass is
installed, you can compile your Sass to CSS using the sass
command. You'll
need to tell Sass which file to build from, and where to output CSS to. For
example, running sass input.scss output.css
from your terminal would take a
single Sass file, input.scss
, and compile that file to output.css
.
You can also watch individual files or directories with the --watch
flag. The
watch flag tells Sass to watch your source files for changes, and re-compile CSS
each time you save your Sass. If you wanted to watch (instead of manually build)
your input.scss
file, you'd just add the watch flag to your command, like so:
sass --watch input.scss output.css
You can watch and output to directories by using folder paths as your input and output, and separating them with a colon. In this example:
sass --watch app/sass:public/stylesheets
Sass would watch all files in the app/sass
folder for changes, and compile CSS
to the public/stylesheets
folder.
{% funFact %}
Sass has two syntaxes! The SCSS syntax (.scss
) is used most commonly. It's
a superset of CSS, which means all valid CSS is also valid SCSS. The
indented syntax (.sass
) is more unusual: it uses indentation rather than
curly braces to nest statements, and newlines instead of semicolons to
separate them. All our examples are available in both syntaxes.
{% endfunFact %}
Variables
Think of variables as a way to store information that you want to reuse
throughout your stylesheet. You can store things like colors, font stacks, or
any CSS value you think you'll want to reuse. Sass uses the $
symbol to make
something a variable. Here's an example:
{% codeExample 'variables' %} $font-stack: Helvetica, sans-serif; $primary-color: #333;
body { font: 100% $font-stack; color: $primary-color; }
$font-stack: Helvetica, sans-serif $primary-color: #333
body font: 100% $font-stack color: $primary-color {% endcodeExample %}
When the Sass is processed, it takes the variables we define for the
$font-stack
and $primary-color
and outputs normal CSS with our variable
values placed in the CSS. This can be extremely powerful when working with brand
colors and keeping them consistent throughout the site.
Nesting
When writing HTML you've probably noticed that it has a clear nested and visual hierarchy. CSS, on the other hand, doesn't.
Sass will let you nest your CSS selectors in a way that follows the same visual hierarchy of your HTML. Be aware that overly nested rules will result in over-qualified CSS that could prove hard to maintain and is generally considered bad practice.
With that in mind, here's an example of some typical styles for a site's navigation:
{% codeExample 'nesting' %} nav { ul { margin: 0; padding: 0; list-style: none; }
li { display: inline-block; }
a {
display: block;
padding: 6px 12px;
text-decoration: none;
}
}
nav ul margin: 0 padding: 0 list-style: none
li
display: inline-block
a
display: block
padding: 6px 12px
text-decoration: none
{% endcodeExample %}
You'll notice that the ul
, li
, and a
selectors are nested inside the nav
selector. This is a great way to organize your CSS and make it more readable.
Partials
You can create partial Sass files that contain little snippets of CSS that you
can include in other Sass files. This is a great way to modularize your CSS and
help keep things easier to maintain. A partial is a Sass file named with a
leading underscore. You might name it something like _partial.scss
. The
underscore lets Sass know that the file is only a partial file and that it
should not be generated into a CSS file. Sass partials are used with the @use
rule.
Modules
{% render 'doc_snippets/module-system-status' %}
You don't have to write all your Sass in a single file. You can split it up
however you want with the @use
rule. This rule loads another Sass file as a
module, which means you can refer to its variables, mixins, and
functions in your Sass file with a namespace based on the filename. Using a
file will also include the CSS it generates in your compiled output!
{% codeExample 'modules' %} // _base.scss $font-stack: Helvetica, sans-serif; $primary-color: #333;
body { font: 100% $font-stack; color: $primary-color; }
// styles.scss @use 'base';
.inverse { background-color: base.$primary-color; color: white; }
// _base.sass $font-stack: Helvetica, sans-serif $primary-color: #333
body font: 100% $font-stack color: $primary-color
// styles.sass @use 'base'
.inverse background-color: base.$primary-color color: white
body { font: 100% Helvetica, sans-serif; color: #333; }
.inverse { background-color: #333; color: white; } {% endcodeExample %}
Notice we're using @use 'base';
in the styles.scss
file. When you use a file
you don't need to include the file extension. Sass is smart and will figure it
out for you.
Mixins
Some things in CSS are a bit tedious to write, especially with CSS3 and the many
vendor prefixes that exist. A mixin lets you make groups of CSS declarations
that you want to reuse throughout your site. It helps keep your Sass very DRY.
You can even pass in values to make your mixin more flexible. Here's an example
for theme
.
{% codeExample 'mixins' %} @mixin theme($theme: DarkGray) { background: $theme; box-shadow: 0 0 1px rgba($theme, .25); color: #fff; }
.info { @include theme; } .alert { @include theme($theme: DarkRed); } .success { @include theme($theme: DarkGreen); }
@mixin theme($theme: DarkGray) background: $theme box-shadow: 0 0 1px rgba($theme, .25) color: #fff
.info @include theme
.alert @include theme($theme: DarkRed)
.success @include theme($theme: DarkGreen) {% endcodeExample %}
To create a mixin you use the @mixin
directive and give it a name. We've named
our mixin theme
. We're also using the variable $theme
inside the parentheses
so we can pass in a theme
of whatever we want. After you create your mixin,
you can then use it as a CSS declaration starting with @include
followed by
the name of the mixin.
Extend/Inheritance
Using @extend
lets you share a set of CSS properties from one selector to
another. In our example we're going to create a simple series of messaging for
errors, warnings and successes using another feature which goes hand in hand
with extend, placeholder classes. A placeholder class is a special type of class
that only prints when it is extended, and can help keep your compiled CSS neat
and clean.
{% codeExample 'extend-inheritance' %} /* This CSS will print because %message-shared is extended. */ %message-shared { border: 1px solid #ccc; padding: 10px; color: #333; }
// This CSS won't print because %equal-heights is never extended. %equal-heights { display: flex; flex-wrap: wrap; }
.message { @extend %message-shared; }
.success { @extend %message-shared; border-color: green; }
.error { @extend %message-shared; border-color: red; }
.warning { @extend %message-shared; border-color: yellow; }
/* This CSS will print because %message-shared is extended. */ %message-shared border: 1px solid #ccc padding: 10px color: #333
// This CSS won't print because %equal-heights is never extended. %equal-heights display: flex flex-wrap: wrap
.message @extend %message-shared
.success @extend %message-shared border-color: green
.error @extend %message-shared border-color: red
.warning @extend %message-shared border-color: yellow {% endcodeExample %}
What the above code does is tells .message
, .success
, .error
, and
.warning
to behave just like %message-shared
. That means anywhere that
%message-shared
shows up, .message
, .success
, .error
, & .warning
will
too. The magic happens in the generated CSS, where each of these classes will
get the same CSS properties as %message-shared
. This helps you avoid having to
write multiple class names on HTML elements.
You can extend most simple CSS selectors in addition to placeholder classes in Sass, but using placeholders is the easiest way to make sure you aren't extending a class that's nested elsewhere in your styles, which can result in unintended selectors in your CSS.
Note that the CSS in %equal-heights
isn't generated, because %equal-heights
is never extended.
Operators
Doing math in your CSS is very helpful. Sass has a handful of standard math
operators like +
, -
, *
, math.div()
, and %
. In our example we're going
to do some simple math to calculate widths for an article
and aside
.
{% codeExample 'operators' %} @use "sass:math";
.container { display: flex; }
article[role="main"] { width: math.div(600px, 960px) * 100%; }
aside[role="complementary"] { width: math.div(300px, 960px) * 100%; margin-left: auto; }
@use "sass:math"
.container display: flex
article[role="main"] width: math.div(600px, 960px) * 100%
aside[role="complementary"] width: math.div(300px, 960px) * 100% margin-left: auto {% endcodeExample %}
We've created a very simple fluid grid, based on 960px. Operations in Sass let us do something like take pixel values and convert them to percentages without much hassle.