An sbt plugin that enables you to use Sass in your sbt-web project.
This plugin is a reimplementation of sbt-sass. Since I wasn't allowed to install the sass command line compiler on my company's' webserver (damn you corporate IT), I decided to rewrite the plugin to use libsass instead. Due to these changes, the plugin no longer resembled the old plugin, which is why I decided to host it myself.
This plugin is based on libsass version 3.5.5, that implements the Sass 3.4 specification.
The sbt-sassify plugin supports the following operating systems:
- OS X 10.8+
- Windows (32/64 bit)
- Linux (32/64 bit)
This plugin has been tested against sbt-web and the Play framework versions 1.4.1 and 2.4.3+ respectively. Additionally, it requires Java 7.
To use the sbt-sassify
plugin you can include the plugin in project/plugins.sbt
or project/sbt-sassify.sbt
like this:
addSbtPlugin("io.github.irundaia" % "sbt-sassify" % "1.5.2")
This plugin uses the same conventions as sbt-web. As such all *.sass
and *.scss
files in the <source dir>/assets
directory will be compiled. Depending on the extension of the file, the plugin will decide which syntax should be used to compile the source file. .sass
for the indented syntax and .scss
for the css-like syntax. (Note that the input style can be forced. See the syntaxDetection
option.)
For example, given a file structure as:
app
└ assets
└ stylesheets
└ main.scss
└ utils
└ _reset.scss
└ _layout.scss
With the following main.scss
source:
@import "utils/reset";
@import "utils/layout";
h1 {
color: red;
}
The Sass file outlined above, will be compiled into public/stylesheets/main.css
, and it will include all the content of the reset
and layout
partials.
WebJars enable us to depend on client side libraries without pulling all dependencies into our own code base manually.
Compass is a library containing all sorts of reusable Sass functions and mixins. Unfortunately, it is targeted towards the Ruby implementation of Sass. Luckily, there is a number of useful mixins that can be extracted from it. These mixins are wrapped in a WebJar.
Including the compass mixins in your project is as easy as including the WebJar dependency in your library dependencies. For example, within a build.sbt
file add:
libraryDependencies += "org.webjars.bower" % "compass-mixins" % "0.12.7"
sbt-web will automatically extract WebJars into a `lib`` folder relative to your asset's target folder. Therefore, to use the Compass mixins you can import them by:
@import "lib/compass-mixins/lib/compass";
table.ellipsed-table {
tr td {
max-width: 100px;
@include ellipsis();
}
}
The same idea can be used to include other Sass libraries, for instance the official Sass port of bootstrap. To include the WebJar use:
libraryDependencies += "org.webjars.bower" % "bootstrap-sass" % "3.3.6"
Then to use it in your project, you can use:
@import "lib/bootstrap-sass/assets/stylesheets/bootstrap";
Some options can be passed to the Sass compiler. For an overview, see below:
Setting | Description | Supported values | Default value |
---|---|---|---|
cssStyle | The style of the output CSS file. | Minified /Maxified /Sassy |
Minified |
generateSourceMaps | Whether or not source files are generated. | true /false |
true |
embedSources | Whether or not the sources should be embedded in the source map file. | true /false |
true |
syntaxDetection | How to determine whether the sass/scss syntax is used. | Auto /ForceScss /ForceSass |
Auto |
assetRootURL | The base URL used to locate the assets. | Any String |
/assets |
floatingPointPrecision | The number of digits of precision used when rounding decimal numbers. | Any positive Int |
10 |
extension | The extension of the compiled file | Any String |
css |
Changing the settings can be done by including the following settings in your build.sbt file:
import org.irundaia.sbt.sass._
SassKeys.cssStyle := Maxified
SassKeys.generateSourceMaps := true
SassKeys.syntaxDetection := ForceScss
sbt-sassify uses semantic versioning. Given a version number major.minor.patch
, an increment in
major
signifies a non-backwards-compatible API change;minor
signifies a backwards-compatible functionality implementation;patch
signifies a backwards-compatible bug fix/refactoring.
-
Issues have been known to occur when a different version of libsass has been installed on your system. This is caused by the c-API changing in libsass version 3.4.5. If your system has a different version installed, this will cause linking errors. Currently, a workaround would be to make sure that the same version of libsass is installed.
-
Only one Sass syntax style can be used at the same time. So when compiling a .scss file, one cannot include a .sass file. (Well, you can, but it won't compile.)
-
Due to a lack of testing, this plugin might not work on all 32-bit linux distributions.