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Changelog
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which is not valid in Sass and is no longer valid in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.
Changelog
1.66.1
Changelog
1.66.0
Breaking change: Drop support for the additional CSS calculations defined in CSS Values and Units 4. Custom Sass functions whose names overlapped with these new CSS functions were being parsed as CSS calculations instead, causing an unintentional breaking change outside our normal [compatibility policy] for CSS compatibility changes.
Support will be added again in a future version, but only after Sass has emitted a deprecation warning for all functions that will break for at least three months prior to the breakage.
Changelog
1.64.1
SassCalculation.clamp()
with less than 3 arguments
would throw an error.Changelog
1.64.0
Comments that appear before or between @use
and @forward
rules are now
emitted in source order as much as possible, instead of always being emitted
after the CSS of all module dependencies.
Fix a bug where an interpolation in a custom property name crashed if the file
was loaded by a @use
nested in an @import
.
Add a new SassCalculation
type that represents the calculation objects added
in Dart Sass 1.40.0.
Add Value.assertCalculation()
, which returns the value if it's a
SassCalculation
and throws an error otherwise.
Produce a better error message when an environment that supports some Node.js APIs loads the browser entrypoint but attempts to access the filesystem.
@imports
failed to load when using the
deprecated functions render
or renderSync
and those relative imports were
loaded multiple times across different files.Changelog
1.63.6
import sass from 'sass'
again after it was broken in the last release.exports
declaration in package.json
.Changelog
1.63.5
require()
and ESM
import
could crash on Node.js.Fix a deadlock when running at high concurrency on 32-bit systems.
Fix a race condition where the embedded compiler could deadlock or crash if a compilation ID was reused immediately after the compilation completed.
Changelog
1.62.0
Deprecate the use of multiple !global
or !default
flags on the same
variable. This deprecation is named duplicate-var-flags
.
Allow special numbers like var()
or calc()
in the global functions:
grayscale()
, invert()
, saturate()
, and opacity()
. These are also
native CSS filter
functions. This is in addition to number values which were
already allowed.
Fix a cosmetic bug where an outer rule could be duplicated after nesting was resolved, instead of re-using a shared rule.
Changelog
1.61.0
Potentially breaking change: Drop support for End-of-Life Node.js 12.
Fix remaining cases for the performance regression introduced in 1.59.0.