Book Image

Sass and Compass Designer's Cookbook

By : Bass Jobsen, Stuart Robson
Book Image

Sass and Compass Designer's Cookbook

By: Bass Jobsen, Stuart Robson

Overview of this book

Sass and Compass Designer's Cookbook helps you to get most out of CSS3 and harness its benefits to create engaging and receptive applications. This book will help you develop faster and reduce the maintenance time for your web development projects by using Sass and Compass. You will learn how to use with CSS frameworks such as Bootstrap and Foundation and understand how to use other libraries of pre-built mixins. You will also learn setting up a development environment with Gulp. This book guides you through all the concepts and gives you practical examples for full understanding.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Sass and Compass Designer's Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Commenting your code in the SCSS syntax


Commenting your code will help you and others to better understand the code. Comments can also be used by other tools. If you or someone else has to change your code, maybe after a long period since the code has been written, comments should make clear what a block of code does and why it has been added in the first place.

Getting ready

For this recipe, you will only have to install Ruby Sass. The Installing Sass for command line usage recipe of Chapter 1, Getting Started with Sass, explains how you can install Ruby Sass.

How to do it...

Perform the following step to find out the differences between the three types of comments supported by Sass:

  1. Create a Sass template called comments.scss. In this file, write down the SCSS code as follows:

    // start comments
    
    $author: 'Bass Jobsen';
    
    // scss-lint:disable Comment
    /*!
    * Copyright 2015 #{$author}
    */
    
    // scss-lint:disable PropertySpelling
    //compilles into invalid CSS
    .code {
      author: $author;
    }
    
    // scss-lint...