Book Image

Mastering Sass

By : Luke Watts
Book Image

Mastering Sass

By: Luke Watts

Overview of this book

CSS and Sass add elegance and excellence to the basic language, and consist of a CSS-compatible syntax that allows you to use variables, nested rules, mixins, inline imports, and much more. This book will start with an overview of the features in Sass and Compass, most of which you'll already be familiar; however, this will ensure you know what’s expected as the book goes deeper into Sass and Compass. Next you will learn CSS and HTML concepts that are vital to a good Sass workflow. After all, Sass exists to simplify writing CSS, but it won’t teach you how to make clean, scalable, reusable CSS. For that, you need to understand some basic concepts of OOCSS, SMACCS, and Atomic Design. Once you’ve brushed up on the important concepts, it’s time to write some Sass. Mainly you’ll write a few functions and mixins that really leverage control flow using @if / @else loops and you’ll learn how to figure out when and why things are going wrong before they bring you to a stop. Moving further, you’ll learn how to use @debug, @warn and @error to properly handle errors. You’ll also learn about Gulp and how to use it to automate your workflow and reduce your repetitive tasks. And finally you’ll learn about sourcemaps. With sourcemaps, you’ll be able to write, debug, and view your Sass and Compass all from within the browser. It’ll even LiveReload too! As a bonus, you’ll take a look at that funky Flexbox, currently all the rage! You’ll learn how powerful and flexible it really is, and how you can use it with Compass. Best of all, it falls back very gracefully indeed! In fact, you’ll be able to apply it to any existing project without having to change a line of the original CSS.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Mastering Sass
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

The $susy configuration map


Right now, we're mostly using the default settings of Susy. However, Susy allows for a lot of configuration through its configuration map, which is called $susy. The settings in the $susy map allow us to set how wide the container should be, how many columns our grid should have, how wide the gutters are, whether those gutters should be margins or padding, and whether the gutters should be on the left, right, or both sides of each column. Actually, there are even more settings available depending on the type of grid you'd like to build.

Let's define our $susy  map with the container set to 1160px in scss/style.scss in place of our $grid  map:

$susy: ( 
    container: 1160px 
); 

Now we can go back to our scss/layout/_grid.scss file and remove the 1160px value from the container mixin because it will use the value in the $susy container property:

.container { 
    @include container; 
} 

You'll also notice we needed to specify of 12 in...