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sass-embedded-win32-ia32

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sass-embedded-win32-ia32 - npm Package Versions

1
7

1.71.0

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1.71.0

For more information about pkg: importers, see [the announcement][pkg-importers] on the Sass blog.

Command-Line Interface

  • Add a --pkg-importer flag to enable built-in pkg: importers. Currently this only supports the Node.js package resolution algorithm, via --pkg-importer=node. For example, @use "pkg:bootstrap" will load node_modules/bootstrap/scss/bootstrap.scss.

JavaScript API

  • Add a NodePackageImporter importer that can be passed to the importers option. This loads files using the pkg: URL scheme according to the Node.js package resolution algorithm. For example, @use "pkg:bootstrap" will load node_modules/bootstrap/scss/bootstrap.scss. The constructor takes a single optional argument, which indicates the base directory to use when locating node_modules directories. It defaults to path.dirname(require.main.filename).

Dart API

  • Add a NodePackageImporter importer that can be passed to the importers option. This loads files using the pkg: URL scheme according to the Node.js package resolution algorithm. For example, @use "pkg:bootstrap" will load node_modules/bootstrap/scss/bootstrap.scss. The constructor takes a single argument, which indicates the base directory to use when locating node_modules directories.
sassbot
published 1.70.0 •

Changelog

Source

1.70.0

JavaScript API

  • Add a sass.initCompiler() function that returns a sass.Compiler object which supports compile() and compileString() methods with the same API as the global Sass object. On the Node.js embedded host, each sass.Compiler object uses a single long-lived subprocess, making compiling multiple stylesheets much more efficient.

  • Add a sass.initAsyncCompiler() function that returns a sass.AsyncCompiler object which supports compileAsync() and compileStringAsync() methods with the same API as the global Sass object. On the Node.js embedded host, each sass.AsynCompiler object uses a single long-lived subprocess, making compiling multiple stylesheets much more efficient.

Embedded Sass

  • Support the CompileRequest.silent field. This allows compilations with no logging to avoid unnecessary request/response cycles.

  • The Dart Sass embedded compiler now reports its name as "dart-sass" rather than "Dart Sass", to match the JS API's info field.

sassbot
published 1.69.7 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.7

Embedded Sass

  • In the JS Embedded Host, properly install the x64 Dart Sass executable on ARM64 Windows.
sassbot
published 1.69.6 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.6

  • Produce better output for numbers with complex units in meta.inspect() and debugging messages.

  • Escape U+007F DELETE when serializing strings.

  • When generating CSS error messages to display in-browser, escape all code points that aren't in the US-ASCII region. Previously only code points U+0100 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH MACRON were escaped.

  • Provide official releases for musl LibC and for Android.

  • Don't crash when running meta.apply() in asynchronous mode.

JS API

  • Fix a bug where certain exceptions could produce SourceSpans that didn't follow the documented SourceSpan API.
sassbot
published 1.69.5 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.5

JS API

  • Compatibility with Node.js 21.0.0.
sassbot
published 1.69.4 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.4

  • No user-visible changes.
sassbot
published 1.69.3 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.3

Embedded Sass

  • Fix TypeScript type locations in package.json.
sassbot
published 1.69.2 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.2

JS API

  • Fix a bug where Sass crashed when running in the browser if there was a global variable named process.
sassbot
published 1.69.1 •

Changelog

Source

1.69.1

  • No user-visible changes.
sassbot
published 1.67.0 •

Changelog

Source

1.67.0

  • All functions defined in CSS Values and Units 4 are now once again parsed as calculation objects: round(), mod(), rem(), sin(), cos(), tan(), asin(), acos(), atan(), atan2(), pow(), sqrt(), hypot(), log(), exp(), abs(), and sign().

    Unlike in 1.65.0, function calls are not locked into being parsed as calculations or plain Sass functions at parse-time. This means that user-defined functions will take precedence over CSS calculations of the same name. Although the function names calc() and clamp() are still forbidden, users may continue to freely define functions whose names overlap with other CSS calculations (including abs(), min(), max(), and round() whose names overlap with global Sass functions).

  • Breaking change: As a consequence of the change in calculation parsing described above, calculation functions containing interpolation are now parsed more strictly than before. However, almost all interpolations that would have produced valid CSS will continue to work. The only exception is #{$variable}% which is not valid in Sass and is no longer valid in calculations. Instead of this, either use $variable directly and ensure it already has the % unit, or write ($variable * 1%).

  • Potentially breaking bug fix: The importer used to load a given file is no longer used to load absolute URLs that appear in that file. This was unintented behavior that contradicted the Sass specification. Absolute URLs will now correctly be loaded only from the global importer list. This applies to the modern JS API, the Dart API, and the embedded protocol.

Embedded Sass

  • Substantially improve the embedded compiler's performance when compiling many files or files that require many importer or function call round-trips with the embedded host.
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