A very simple package to watch for scss file changes and regenerate the css files accordingly.
TypeScript type definition generator for SCSS CSS Modules
run scripts from package.json when files change
TypeScript type definition generator for SCSS CSS Modules
A collection of SCSS-specific rules for Stylelint
The recommended shareable SCSS config for Stylelint
SCSS parser for PostCSS
The standard shareable SCSS config for Stylelint
Find the dependencies of an scss file
Webpack loader that resolves relative paths in url() statements based on the original source file
A tokenzier for Sass' SCSS syntax
Jest plugin for filtering by filename or test name
SCSS preset for Storybook
Turns off all SCSS rules that are unnecessary or might conflict with Prettier.
TypeScript type definition generator for SCSS CSS Modules
Lezer-based Sass/SCSS grammar
Sharable stylelint config based on https://sass-guidelin.es/
Sorts CSS declarations fast and automatically in a certain order.
Iconfont Generator.
stylelint config for WordPress development.
A library to parse/stringify SCSS
PostCSS syntax for parsing HTML (and HTML-like)
Bindings for the Watchman file watching service
An utility for converting sass files to css, with batch file processing, output template file support, watch mode and other useful attributes
Watches for changes and compiles Haml, Sass, Scss, and Coffeescript
Watch files in a directory and take some action when they change (run tests, compile markdown, compile SCSS, etc)
<p>Sass or the much better approach of scss is really helpful and a big silver bullet for my css structuring in ruby projects.</p> \ <p>Standard sass command works for whole directories or single files only. In general it gets the jobs we want done, but in practical usage i think the sass command tool is a little bit unconvinient. A common scenario for me is, \ that you have whole bunch of sass files, which you want to compile to a single compressed output file. But if you have splitted your sass files in component based modules and you want to watch the complete folder you have to care for dependency handling in each file, because each file will be compiled for its own.</p> \ <pre># compiling a complete folder with scss ~ $ sass css/scss:css/compiled</pre> \ <p>So converting the whole folder is not what i want, because i don\'t want to import for example my color.sass config file in each module again. Compiling a single file seems to be the better solution, and it works in general, as expected, but the devil is in the detail. </p> <pre># compiling a single file where the other files are imported. ~ $ sass css/scss/main.scss:css/compiled/main.css</pre> \ <p>If we change a file with impact to our main.sass file, the --watch handle will not get it, because it observes only the timestamp of the given main.sass.</p> <p>Here is it, where mindful_sass tries to help out. You use it according to the single file variant of sass, but it tries to observe the whole folder the given sass file is placed. If a timestamp of file in the sass folder or its children changes it will compile the specified main.sass again.</p> \ <p>This gem is not aimed to replace anything in the sass universe. It is only a wrapper to avoid the described unconvinience, and i hope that it gets useless as fast as possible, because the sass development gets this feature done for themselves.</p> \ <p>Thanks anyway to the sass developer team.</p>
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.
No description provided.