What is postcss-simple-vars?
The postcss-simple-vars package is a PostCSS plugin that allows you to use Sass-like variables in your CSS. It simplifies the process of managing and reusing values across your stylesheets, making your CSS more maintainable and easier to read.
What are postcss-simple-vars's main functionalities?
Variable Declaration
You can declare variables using the `$` symbol and then use these variables throughout your CSS. This makes it easy to manage and update values in one place.
/* CSS */
$primary-color: #3498db;
$padding: 10px;
.button {
background-color: $primary-color;
padding: $padding;
}
Variable Interpolation
You can perform operations on variables using interpolation. This allows for dynamic calculations and more flexible styling.
/* CSS */
$size: 10px;
.icon {
width: $(size * 2);
height: $(size * 2);
}
Default Variables
You can set default values for variables using the `!default` flag. This ensures that a variable is only assigned a value if it hasn't been defined previously.
/* CSS */
$primary-color: #3498db !default;
$primary-color: #e74c3c;
.button {
background-color: $primary-color;
}
Other packages similar to postcss-simple-vars
postcss-css-variables
The postcss-css-variables package allows you to use native CSS custom properties (variables) in a way that is compatible with older browsers. Unlike postcss-simple-vars, it focuses on providing a polyfill for native CSS variables rather than introducing a new syntax.
postcss-advanced-variables
The postcss-advanced-variables package extends the functionality of postcss-simple-vars by adding support for conditionals, loops, and more complex variable manipulations. It is more feature-rich but also more complex to use.
postcss-mixins
The postcss-mixins package allows you to create reusable chunks of CSS, similar to Sass mixins. While it doesn't focus solely on variables, it complements postcss-simple-vars by providing additional tools for code reuse and modularity.
PostCSS Simple Variables
PostCSS plugin for Sass-like variables.
You can use variables inside values, selectors and at-rule’s parameters.
If you want be closer to W3C spec,
you should use postcss-custom-properties plugin.
$blue: #056ef0;
$column: 200px;
.menu {
width: calc(4 * $column);
}
.menu_link {
background: $blue;
width: $column;
}
.menu {
width: calc(4 * 200px);
}
.menu_link {
background: #056ef0;
width: 200px;
}
Interpolation
There is special syntax if you want to use variable inside CSS words:
$prefix: my-company-widget
$prefix { }
$(prefix)_button { }
Usage
Without options:
postcss([ require('postcss-simple-vars') ])
With options:
postcss([
require('postcss-simple-vars')({ variables: require('./constants') })
])
See PostCSS docs for examples for your environment.
Options
Call plugin function to set options:
.pipe(postcss([ require('postcss-simple-vars')({ silent: true }) ]))
variables
Set default variables. It is useful to store colors or other constants
in common file:
module.exports = {
blue: '#056ef0'
}
var colors = require('./config/colors');
var vars = require('postcss-simple-vars')
gulp.task('css', function () {
return gulp.src('./src/*.css')
.pipe(postcss([ vars({ variables: colors }) ]))
.pipe(gulp.dest('./dest'));
});
You can set a function returning object, if you want to update default
variables in webpack hot reload:
postcss([
vars({
variables: function () {
return require('./config/colors');
}
})
]
silent
Left unknown variables in CSS and do not throw a error. Default is false
.
only
Set value only for variables from this object.
Other variables will not be changed. It is useful for PostCSS plugin developers.