[SASS] Add control directives, and misc. fixes (#1805)

* [SASS] Add control directives, other selector uses, and variables in selector names

* sass: add contributor credit
This commit is contained in:
Keith Miyake 2016-06-19 09:59:26 -04:00 committed by ven
parent 0484537a1c
commit bf32d58d75

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@ -5,6 +5,7 @@ contributors:
- ["Laura Kyle", "https://github.com/LauraNK"]
- ["Sean Corrales", "https://github.com/droidenator"]
- ["Kyle Mendes", "https://github.com/pink401k"]
- ["Keith Miyake", "https://github.com/kaymmm"]
---
Sass is a CSS extension language that adds features such as variables, nesting, mixins and more.
@ -52,16 +53,161 @@ body {
font-family: 'Roboto', sans-serif;
}
/* This is much more maintainable than having to change the color
each time it appears throughout your stylesheet. */
/* Mixins
/* Control Directives
============================== */
/* Sass lets you use @if, @else, @for, @while, and @each to control the
compilation of your code to CSS. */
/* @if/@else blocks behave exactly as you might expect */
$debug: true !default;
@mixin debugmode {
@if $debug {
@debug "Debug mode enabled";
display: inline-block;
}
@else {
display: none;
}
}
.info {
@include debugmode;
}
/* If $debug is set to true, .info is displayed; if it's set to false then
.info is not displayed.
Note: @debug will output debugging information to the command line.
Useful for checking variables while debugging your SCSS. */
.info {
display: inline-block;
}
/* @for is a control loop that iterates through a range of values.
Particularly useful for setting styles on a collection of items.
There are two forms, "through" and "to." The former includes the last value,
the latter stops at the last value. */
@for $c from 1 to 4 {
div:nth-of-type(#{$c}) {
left: ($c - 1) * 900 / 3;
}
}
@for $c from 1 through 3 {
.myclass-#{$c} {
color: rgb($c * 255 / 3, $c * 255 / 3, $c * 255 / 3);
}
}
/* Will compile to: */
div:nth-of-type(1) {
left: 0;
}
div:nth-of-type(2) {
left: 300;
}
div:nth-of-type(3) {
left: 600;
}
.myclass-1 {
color: #555555;
}
.myclass-2 {
color: #aaaaaa;
}
.myclass-3 {
color: white;
// SASS automatically converts #FFFFFF to white
}
/* @while is very straightforward: */
$columns: 4;
$column-width: 80px;
@while $columns > 0 {
.col-#{$columns} {
width: $column-width;
left: $column-width * ($columns - 1);
}
$columns: $columns - 1;
}
/* Will output the following CSS: */
.col-4 {
width: 80px;
left: 240px;
}
.col-3 {
width: 80px;
left: 160px;
}
.col-2 {
width: 80px;
left: 80px;
}
.col-1 {
width: 80px;
left: 0px;
}
/* @each functions like @for, except using a list instead of ordinal values
Note: you specify lists just like other variables, with spaces as
delimiters. */
$social-links: facebook twitter linkedin reddit;
.social-links {
@each $sm in $social-links {
.icon-#{$sm} {
background-image: url("images/#{$sm}.png");
}
}
}
/* Which will output: */
.social-links .icon-facebook {
background-image: url("images/facebook.png");
}
.social-links .icon-twitter {
background-image: url("images/twitter.png");
}
.social-links .icon-linkedin {
background-image: url("images/linkedin.png");
}
.social-links .icon-reddit {
background-image: url("images/reddit.png");
}
/*Mixins
==============================*/
/* If you find you are writing the same code for more than one
element, you might want to store that code in a mixin.
@ -93,7 +239,6 @@ div {
background-color: #A3A4FF;
}
/* You can use mixins to create a shorthand property. */
@mixin size($width, $height) {
@ -139,7 +284,7 @@ body {
}
.footer {
background-color: fade_out(#000000, 0.25)
background-color: fade_out(#000000, 0.25);
}
/* Compiles to: */