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Sass and Compass Designer's Cookbook

You're reading from   Sass and Compass Designer's Cookbook Over 120 practical and easy-to-understand recipes that explain how to use Sass and Compass to write efficient, maintainable, and reusable CSS code for your web development projects

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783286935
Length 436 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Bass Jobsen Bass Jobsen
Author Profile Icon Bass Jobsen
Bass Jobsen
Stuart Robson Stuart Robson
Author Profile Icon Stuart Robson
Stuart Robson
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Sass FREE CHAPTER 2. Debugging Your Code 3. Variables, Mixins, and Functions 4. Nested Selectors and Modular CSS 5. Built-in Functions 6. Using Compass 7. Cross-Browser CSS3 Mixins 8. Advanced Sass Coding 9. Building Layouts with Sass 10. Building Grid-based Layouts with Susy and Sass 11. Foundation and Sass 12. Bootstrap and Sass 13. Meeting the Bourbon Family 14. Ruby on Rails and Sass 15. Building Mobile Apps 16. Setting up a Build Chain with Grunt Index

Using @each


The @each control directive in Sass can be used to read the items of a list or map. In this recipe, you will learn how to use the @each control directive to dynamically create your CSS code.

Getting ready

You can use the Ruby Sass command-line compiler to compile the SCSS code into static CSS code. You can read about how to install and use the Ruby Sass command-line compiler in the Installing Sass for command line usage recipe of Chapter 1, Getting Started with Sass.

How to do it...

Perform the following steps to understand how to use the @each directive in Sass:

  1. Create a Sass file called list.scss that will contain an SCSS code like that shown here:

    $class-names: first, second, third;
    
    @each $class in $class-names {
      .#{$class} {
         color: white;
       }
    }
  2. Then, run the following command in your console:

    sass list.scss
    
  3. The compiled CSS code from the previous step should look like that shown here:

     .first {
      color: white; }
    
    .second {
      color: white; }
    
    .third {
      color: white; }

How...

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