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node-sass
Advanced tools
The node-sass npm package is a library that allows you to natively compile .scss files to CSS at incredible speed and automatically via a connect middleware. It provides a binding for Node.js to the Sass engine, which is written in C++ and allows for the translation of SCSS or SASS syntax into standard CSS that browsers can understand.
Compiling SCSS to CSS
This feature allows you to compile .scss files into .css files. The 'render' method takes an options object and a callback function. The options object specifies the input and output paths for the SCSS and CSS files, respectively. The callback is invoked after the compilation process, and you can handle the result or error accordingly.
const sass = require('node-sass');
sass.render({
file: 'path/to/input.scss',
outFile: 'path/to/output.css'
}, function(error, result) { // Node-style callback from v3.0.0 onwards
if(!error){
// No errors during the compilation, write this result on the disk
fs.writeFile('path/to/output.css', result.css, function(err){
if(!err){
//file written on disk
}
});
}
});
Watching files or directories
This feature allows you to watch .scss files or directories for changes and automatically recompile them to CSS when a change is detected. The example uses 'chokidar', an external library for watching files, to listen for changes on the specified SCSS file and then uses node-sass to compile the file to CSS.
const sass = require('node-sass');
const chokidar = require('chokidar');
chokidar.watch('path/to/input.scss').on('change', () => {
sass.render({
file: 'path/to/input.scss',
outFile: 'path/to/output.css'
}, function(error, result) {
if (!error) {
fs.writeFile('path/to/output.css', result.css, function(err){
if(!err){
console.log('SCSS file updated.');
}
});
}
});
});
Command Line Interface (CLI) usage
node-sass provides a CLI for compiling SCSS files to CSS directly from the command line. In this example, the '--output-style' option is used to specify the CSS output format (compressed in this case), '-o' is used to define the output directory for the compiled CSS, and the last argument is the input directory containing the SCSS files.
node-sass --output-style compressed -o dist/css src/scss
The 'sass' package is the primary implementation of Sass, which is written in Dart. It provides the same core functionality as node-sass but does not rely on a native C++ binding, making it more portable and easier to install across different environments. It is also the package recommended by the Sass team as node-sass has been deprecated.
PostCSS is a tool for transforming CSS with JavaScript plugins. While it is not a direct replacement for node-sass, it can be used with plugins like 'precss' to provide similar SCSS-like syntax and features. PostCSS is highly extensible and can be integrated with a large number of plugins to extend its capabilities beyond what node-sass offers.
Less is a backward-compatible language extension for CSS. It is similar to SCSS in terms of features like variables, mixins, and nesting, but it has its own syntax and compiles to CSS using the Less compiler. While it serves a similar purpose to node-sass, it is a different preprocessor language with its own community and ecosystem.
Stylus is a preprocessor that serves as an alternative to SCSS. It offers a flexible syntax with optional colons, semicolons, and braces, and provides powerful features like variable interpolation and functions. Stylus can be seen as a more expressive, but less widely adopted, alternative to node-sass.
Node-sass is a library that provides binding for Node.js to libsass, the C version of the popular stylesheet preprocessor, Sass.
It allows you to natively compile .scss files to css at incredible speed and automatically via a connect middleware.
Find it on npm: https://npmjs.org/package/node-sass
Follow @nodesass on twitter for release updates: https://twitter.com/nodesass
The libsass library is not currently at feature parity with the 3.2 Ruby Gem that most Sass users will use, and has little-to-no support for 3.3 syntax. While we try our best to maintain feature parity with libsass, we can not enable features that have not been implemented in libsass yet.
If you'd like to see what features are still upcoming in libsass, Jo Liss has written a blog post on the subject.
Please check for issues on the libsass repo (as there is a good chance that it may already be an issue there for it), and otherwise create a new issue there.
If this project is missing an API or command line flag that has been added to libsass, then please open an issue here. We will then look at updating our libsass submodule and create a new release. You can help us create the new release by rebuilding binaries, and then creating a pull request to the node-sass-binaries repo.
npm install node-sass
Some users have reported issues installing on Ubuntu due to node
being registered to another package. Follow the official NodeJS docs to install NodeJS so that #!/usr/bin/env node
correctly resolved.
Compiling versions 0.9.4 and above on Windows machines requires Visual Studio 2013 WD. If you have multiple VS versions, use npm install
with the --msvs_version=2013
flag also use this flag when rebuilding the module with node-gyp or nw-gyp.
var sass = require('node-sass');
sass.render({
file: scss_filename,
success: callback
[, options..]
});
// OR
var result = sass.renderSync({
data: scss_content
[, options..]
});
The API for using node-sass has changed, so that now there is only one variable - an options hash. Some of these options are optional, and in some circumstances some are mandatory.
file
is a String
of the path to an scss
file for libsass to render. One of this or data
options are required, for both render and renderSync.
data
is a String
containing the scss to be rendered by libsass. One of this or file
options are required, for both render and renderSync. It is recommended that you use the includePaths
option in conjunction with this, as otherwise libsass may have trouble finding files imported via the @import
directive.
success
is a Function
to be called upon successful rendering of the scss to css. This option is required but only for the render function. If provided to renderSync it will be ignored.
The callback function is passed a results object, containing the following keys:
css
- The compiled CSS. Write this to a file, or serve it out as needed.map
- The source mapstats
- An object containing information about the compile. It contains the following keys:
entry
- The path to the scss file, or data
if the source was not a filestart
- Date.now() before the compilationend
- Date.now() after the compilationduration
- end - startincludedFiles
- Absolute paths to all related scss files in no particular order.error
is a Function
to be called upon occurrence of an error when rendering the scss to css. This option is optional, and only applies to the render function. If provided to renderSync it will be ignored.
importer
is a Function
to be called when libsass parser encounters the import directive. If present, libsass will call node-sass and let the user change file, data or both during the compilation. This option is optional, and applies to both render and renderSync functions. Also, it can either return object of form {file:'..', contents: '..'}
or send it back via done({})
. Note in renderSync or render, there is no restriction imposed on using done()
callback or return
statement (dispite of the asnchrony difference).
includePaths
is an Array
of path String
s to look for any @import
ed files. It is recommended that you use this option if you are using the data
option and have any @import
directives, as otherwise libsass may not find your depended-on files.
imagePath
is a String
that represents the public image path. When using the image-url()
function in a stylesheet, this path will be prepended to the path you supply. eg. Given an imagePath
of /path/to/images
, background-image: image-url('image.png')
will compile to background-image: url("/path/to/images/image.png")
indentedSyntax
is a Boolean
flag to determine if Sass Indented Syntax should be used to parse provided string or a file.
omitSourceMapUrl
is a Boolean
flag to determine whether to include sourceMappingURL
comment in the output file.
outFile
specifies where the CSS will be saved. This option does not actually output a file, but is used as input for generating a source map.
outputStyle
is a String
to determine how the final CSS should be rendered. Its value should be one of 'nested'
or 'compressed'
. Node-sass defaults to 'nested'.
['expanded'
and 'compact'
are not currently supported by libsass]
precision
is a Number
that will be used to determine how many digits after the decimal will be allowed. For instance, if you had a decimal number of 1.23456789
and a precision of 5
, the result will be 1.23457
in the final CSS.
sourceComments
is a Boolean
flag to determine what debug information is included in the output file.
You must define this option as well as outFile
in order to generate a source map. If it is set to true
, the source map will be generated at the path provided in the outFile
option. If set to a path (String
), the source map will be generated at the provided path.
sourceMapEmbed
is a Boolean
flag to determine whether to embed sourceMappingUrl
as data URI.
sourceMapContents
is a Boolean
flag to determine whether to include contents
in maps.
var sass = require('node-sass');
sass.render({
file: '/path/to/myFile.scss',
data: 'body{background:blue; a{color:black;}}',
success: function(result) {
// result is an object: v2 change
console.log(result.css);
console.log(result.stats);
console.log(result.map)
},
error: function(error) {
// error is an object: v2 change
console.log(error.message);
console.log(error.code);
console.log(error.line);
console.log(error.column); // new in v2
},
importer: function(url, prev, done) {
// url is the path in import as is, which libsass encountered.
// prev is the previously resolved path.
// done is an optional callback, either consume it or return value synchronously.
someAsyncFunction(url, prev, function(result){
done({
file: result.path, // only one of them is required, see section Sepcial Behaviours.
contents: result.data
});
});
// OR
var result = someSyncFunction(url, prev);
return {file: result.path, contents: result.data};
},
includePaths: [ 'lib/', 'mod/' ],
outputStyle: 'compressed'
});
// OR
var result = sass.renderSync({
file: '/path/to/file.scss',
data: 'body{background:blue; a{color:black;}}',
outputStyle: 'compressed',
outFile: '/to/my/output.css',
sourceMap: true, // or an absolute or relative (to outFile) path
importer: function(url, prev, done) {
// url is the path in import as is, which libsass encountered.
// prev is the previously resolved path.
// done is an optional callback, either consume it or return value synchronously.
someAsyncFunction(url, prev, function(result){
done({
file: result.path, // only one of them is required, see section Sepcial Behaviours.
contents: result.data
});
});
// OR
var result = someSyncFunction(url, prev);
return {file: result.path, contents: result.data};
},
}));
console.log(result.css);
console.log(result.map);
console.log(result.stats);
file
and data
options are set, node-sass will give precedence to data
and use file
to calculate paths in sourcemaps.Both node-sass
and libsass
version info is now present in package.json
and is exposed via info()
method:
require('node-sass').info();
// outputs something like:
// node-sass version: 2.0.0-beta
// libsass version: 3.1.0-beta
Listing of community uses of node-sass in build tools and frameworks.
@jasonsanjose has created a Brackets extension based on node-sass: https://github.com/jasonsanjose/brackets-sass. When editing Sass files, the extension compiles changes on save. The extension also integrates with Live Preview to show Sass changes in the browser without saving or compiling.
Brunch's official sass plugin uses node-sass by default, and automatically falls back to ruby if use of Compass is detected: https://github.com/brunch/sass-brunch
Recompile .scss
files automatically for connect and express based http servers.
This functionality has been moved to node-sass-middleware
in node-sass v1.0.0
@jking90 wrote a DocPad plugin that compiles .scss
files using node-sass: https://github.com/jking90/docpad-plugin-nodesass
@stephenway has created an extension that transpiles Sass to CSS using node-sass with duo.js https://github.com/duojs/sass
@sindresorhus has created a set of grunt tasks based on node-sass: https://github.com/sindresorhus/grunt-sass
@dlmanning has created a gulp sass plugin based on node-sass: https://github.com/dlmanning/gulp-sass
@sintaxi’s Harp web server implicitly compiles .scss
files using node-sass: https://github.com/sintaxi/harp
@stevenschobert has created a metalsmith plugin based on node-sass: https://github.com/stevenschobert/metalsmith-sass
@fourseven has created a meteor plugin based on node-sass: https://github.com/fourseven/meteor-scss
@dbashford has created a Mimosa module for sass which includes node-sass: https://github.com/dbashford/mimosa-sass
There is also an example connect app here: https://github.com/andrew/node-sass-example
Node-sass includes pre-compiled binaries for popular platforms, to add a binary for your platform follow these steps:
Check out the project:
git clone --recursive https://github.com/sass/node-sass.git
cd node-sass
git submodule update --init --recursive
npm install
npm install -g node-gyp
node-gyp rebuild # to make debug release, use -d switch
v0.11.13
v0.11.14
Follow the steps above, but comment out this line in lib/index.js
before the npm install
step. Then uncomment it back again, and continue with the rest of the steps (see issue #563).
The interface for command-line usage is fairly simplistic at this stage, as seen in the following usage section.
Output will be saved with the same name as input SASS file into the current working directory if it's omitted.
node-sass [options] <input.scss> [<output.css>]
Options:
-w, --watch Watch a directory or file
-r, --recursive Recursively watch directories or files
-o, --output Output directory
-x, --omit-source-map-url Omit source map URL comment from output
-i, --indented-syntax Treat data from stdin as sass code (versus scss)
--output-style CSS output style (nested|expanded|compact|compressed)
--source-comments Include debug info in output
--source-map Emit source map
--source-map-embed Embed sourceMappingUrl as data URI
--source-map-contents Embed include contents in map
--include-path Path to look for imported files
--image-path Path to prepend when using the `image-url()` helper
--precision The amount of precision allowed in decimal numbers
--stdout Print the resulting CSS to stdout
--importer Path to custom importer
--help Print usage info
Note --importer
takes the (absolute or relative to pwd) path to a js file, which needs to have a default module.exports
set to the importer function. See our test fixtures for example.
Install runs only two Mocha tests to see if your machine can use the pre-built libsass which will save some time during install. If any tests fail it will build from source.
This module is brought to you and maintained by the following people:
We <3 our contributors! A special thanks to all those who have clocked in some dev time on this project, we really appreciate your hard work. You can find a full list of those people here.
Copyright (c) 2015 Andrew Nesbitt. See LICENSE for details.
FAQs
Wrapper around libsass
The npm package node-sass receives a total of 902,442 weekly downloads. As such, node-sass popularity was classified as popular.
We found that node-sass demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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