- the guy on this talk asqued for it: http://www.confreaks.com/videos/859-railsconf2012-the-future-of-sass
- I wanted to play with ctypes
marianoguerra
first of all download, compile and install libsass:
git clone https://github.com/hcatlin/libsass.git
cd libsass
./configure
make
sudo make install
then you can play with this project in two ways
if no options provided read from stdin:
➜ src ./sass.py
table.hl td.ln {
text-align: right;
}
table.hl td.ln {
text-align: right; }
from a file:
➜ src ./sass.py -f ../examples/simple.scss
.content-navigation {
border-color: #3bbfce;
color: darken(#3bbfce, 9%); }
.border {
padding: 8px;
margin: 8px;
border-color: #3bbfce; }
from a folder:
# I think it doesn't work, never used sass before and don't know what
# this means :)
➜ src ./sass.py -d ../examples/
you can't chew gum and walk at the same time:
➜ src ./sass.py -f ../examples/simple.scss -d ~
usage: sass.py [-h] [-f FILE_PATH | -d DIR_PATH]
sass.py: error: argument -d/--dir: not allowed with argument -f/--file
from a string:
Python 2.7.3 (default, Apr 20 2012, 22:44:07)
>>> import sass
>>> STYLE = """
... table.hl td.ln {
... text-align: right;
... }
... """
>>> ok, style = sass.compile(STYLE)
>>> ok
True
>>> print style
table.hl td.ln {
text-align: right; }
from a file:
>>> ok, style = sass.compile_path("../examples/simple.scss")
>>> ok
True
>>> print style
.content-navigation {
border-color: #3bbfce;
color: darken(#3bbfce, 9%); }
.border {
padding: 8px;
margin: 8px;
border-color: #3bbfce; }
from a folder:
>>> ok, style = sass.compile_folder("../examples/")
# ???
# Profit!
python 2:
sudo python2 setup.py install
python 3:
sudo python3 setup.py install
sudo pip install SassPython
MIT + optional beer for the creator
- make the folder stuff work
- add command line options to specify option styles
- see what the return value of the compile* means and use it if needed