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+++ title = "Sass" weight = 110 +++
Sass is a popular CSS extension language that approaches some of the harder parts of maintaining large sets of CSS rules. If you're curious about what Sass is and why it might be useful for styling your static site, the following links may be of interest:
- The official Sass website
- Why Sass?, by Dan Cederholm
Using Sass in Gutenberg
Gutenberg processes any files with the sass
or scss
extensions in the sass
folder, and places the processed output into a css
file with the same folder
structure and base name into the public
folder:
.
└── sass
├── style.scss // -> ./public/style.css
├── indented_style.sass // -> ./public/indented_style.css
├── _include.scss // This file won't get put into the `public` folder, but other files can @import it.
├── assets
│ ├── fancy.scss // -> ./public/assets/fancy.css
│ ├── same_name.scss // -> ./public/assets/same_name.css
│ ├── same_name.sass // CONFLICT! This has the same base name as the file above, so Gutenberg will return an error.
│ └── _common_mixins.scss // This file won't get put into the `public` folder, but other files can @import it.
└── secret-side-project
└── style.scss // -> ./public/secret-side-project/fancy.css
Files with a leading underscore in the name are not placed into the public
folder, but can still be used as @import
dependencies. For more information, see the "Partials" section of
Sass Basics.
Files with the scss
extension use "Sassy CSS" syntax,
while files with the sass
extension use the "indented" syntax.
Gutenberg will return an error if a scss
and sass
file exist with the same
base name in the same folder to avoid confusion -- see the example above.