1.8 KiB
1.8 KiB
title |
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Sass |
Sass is a preprocessor scripting language that compiles CSS. It essentially brings the power of a standard programming language to your stylesheets. Sass files end with the .scss
file extension.
With Sass, you can make your CSS considerably more efficient. Some of its key features include:
- mixins, which allow you to apply the same style to multiple elements without having to copy and paste
- for, if, and else statements, which allow you to apply styles only in specific conditions
- partials, which allow you to take chunks of your CSS and import them into other
.scss
stylesheets - nesting, which allows you to order child elements inside of their parents on your stylesheet
- extend, which allows you to take the style from one element into another
Store data with Sass variables:
Variable starts with '$' followed by variable name
// Sass Code
$main-fonts:Arial,sans-serif;
$heading-color:green;
// Css Code
h1{
font-family: $main-fonts;
color: $heading-color;
}
Nest CSS within SASS:
On normal CSS codes we have to write each elements css seperate like:
.nav-bar{
background-color: green;
}
.nav-bar ul{
list-style : none;
}
.nav-bar ul li{
display: inline-block;
}
So the above code in Sass code will be:
.nav-bar{
background-color:green;
ul{
list-style: none;
li{
display: inline-block;
}
}
}
MIXINS
Mixins are like functions for CSS. Example:
@mixin box-shadow($x,$y,$blur,$c){
-webkit-box-shadow: $x,$y,$blur,$c;
-moz-box-shadow: $x,$y,$blur,$c;
-ms-box-shadow: $x,$y,$blur,$c;
box-shadow: $x,$y,$blur,$c;
}
.mydiv{
@include box-shadow(0px,0px,5px,#fff);
}