sass
The sass
package on npm is a pure-JavaScript package built from the Dart Sass implementation. In addition to Dart Sass's command-line interface, it provides a JavaScript API that can be used to drive Sass compilations from JavaScript. It even allows an application to control how stylesheets are loaded and define custom functions.
Usage
The JavaScript API provides two entrypoints for compiling Sass to CSS, each of which has a synchronous variant that returns a plain CompileResult and an asynchronous variant that returns a Promise
. The asynchronous variants are much slower, but they allow custom importers and functions to run asynchronously.
compile and compileAsync take a path to a Sass file and return the result of compiling that file to CSS.
const sass = require('sass');
const result = sass.compile("style.scss");
console.log(result.css);compileString and compileStringAsync take a string that represents the contents of a Sass file and return the result of compiling that file to CSS.
const sass = require('sass');
const result = sass.compileString(`
h1 {
font-size: 40px;
code {
font-face: Roboto Mono;
}
}`);
console.log(result.css);
Integrations
Most popular Node.js build systems have integrations available for the JS API:
- Webpack uses the
sass-loader
package. - Gulp uses the
gulp-sass
package. - Broccoli uses the
broccoli-sass-source-maps
package. - Ember uses the
ember-cli-sass
package. - Grunt uses the
grunt-sass
package.
Legacy API
The sass
package also supports an older API. Although this API is deprecated, it will continue to be supported until the release of version 2.0.0 of the sass
package. The legacy API is also supported by the node-sass
package, which is a native extension wrapper for the deprecated LibSass implementation.
The legacy API has two entrypoints for compiling Sass to CSS. Each one can compile either a Sass file by passing in LegacyFileOptions or a string of Sass code by passing in a LegacyStringOptions.
renderSync runs synchronously. It's by far the fastest option when using Dart Sass, but at the cost of only supporting synchronous importer and function plugins.
const sass = require('sass'); // or require('node-sass');
const result = sass.renderSync({file: "style.scss"});
console.log(result.css.toString());render runs asynchronously and calls a callback when it finishes. It's much slower when using Dart Sass, but it supports asynchronous importer and function plugins.
const sass = require('sass'); // or require('node-sass');
sass.render({
file: "style.scss"
}, function(err, result) {
if (err) {
// ...
} else {
console.log(result.css.toString());
}
});