haml 2.0.10 → 2.2.0
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- data/.yardopts +5 -0
- data/MIT-LICENSE +1 -1
- data/README.md +347 -0
- data/Rakefile +124 -19
- data/VERSION +1 -1
- data/VERSION_NAME +1 -0
- data/extra/haml-mode.el +397 -78
- data/extra/sass-mode.el +148 -36
- data/extra/update_watch.rb +13 -0
- data/lib/haml.rb +15 -993
- data/lib/haml/buffer.rb +131 -84
- data/lib/haml/engine.rb +129 -97
- data/lib/haml/error.rb +7 -7
- data/lib/haml/exec.rb +127 -42
- data/lib/haml/filters.rb +107 -42
- data/lib/haml/helpers.rb +210 -156
- data/lib/haml/helpers/action_view_extensions.rb +34 -39
- data/lib/haml/helpers/action_view_mods.rb +132 -139
- data/lib/haml/html.rb +77 -65
- data/lib/haml/precompiler.rb +404 -213
- data/lib/haml/shared.rb +78 -0
- data/lib/haml/template.rb +14 -14
- data/lib/haml/template/patch.rb +2 -2
- data/lib/haml/template/plugin.rb +2 -3
- data/lib/haml/util.rb +211 -6
- data/lib/haml/version.rb +30 -13
- data/lib/sass.rb +7 -856
- data/lib/sass/css.rb +169 -161
- data/lib/sass/engine.rb +344 -328
- data/lib/sass/environment.rb +79 -0
- data/lib/sass/error.rb +33 -11
- data/lib/sass/files.rb +139 -0
- data/lib/sass/plugin.rb +160 -117
- data/lib/sass/plugin/merb.rb +7 -6
- data/lib/sass/plugin/rails.rb +5 -6
- data/lib/sass/repl.rb +58 -0
- data/lib/sass/script.rb +59 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/bool.rb +17 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/color.rb +183 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/funcall.rb +50 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/functions.rb +198 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/lexer.rb +178 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/literal.rb +177 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/node.rb +14 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/number.rb +381 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/operation.rb +45 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/parser.rb +172 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/string.rb +12 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/unary_operation.rb +34 -0
- data/lib/sass/script/variable.rb +31 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/comment_node.rb +73 -10
- data/lib/sass/tree/debug_node.rb +30 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/directive_node.rb +42 -17
- data/lib/sass/tree/file_node.rb +41 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/for_node.rb +48 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/if_node.rb +54 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/mixin_def_node.rb +29 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/mixin_node.rb +48 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/node.rb +214 -11
- data/lib/sass/tree/prop_node.rb +109 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/rule_node.rb +178 -51
- data/lib/sass/tree/variable_node.rb +34 -0
- data/lib/sass/tree/while_node.rb +31 -0
- data/test/haml/engine_test.rb +331 -36
- data/test/haml/helper_test.rb +12 -1
- data/test/haml/results/content_for_layout.xhtml +0 -3
- data/test/haml/results/filters.xhtml +2 -0
- data/test/haml/results/list.xhtml +1 -1
- data/test/haml/template_test.rb +7 -2
- data/test/haml/templates/content_for_layout.haml +0 -2
- data/test/haml/templates/list.haml +1 -1
- data/test/haml/util_test.rb +92 -0
- data/test/sass/css2sass_test.rb +69 -24
- data/test/sass/engine_test.rb +586 -64
- data/test/sass/functions_test.rb +125 -0
- data/test/sass/more_results/more1.css +9 -0
- data/test/sass/more_results/more1_with_line_comments.css +26 -0
- data/test/sass/more_results/more_import.css +29 -0
- data/test/sass/more_templates/_more_partial.sass +2 -0
- data/test/sass/more_templates/more1.sass +23 -0
- data/test/sass/more_templates/more_import.sass +11 -0
- data/test/sass/plugin_test.rb +81 -28
- data/test/sass/results/line_numbers.css +49 -0
- data/test/sass/results/{constants.css → script.css} +4 -4
- data/test/sass/results/subdir/subdir.css +2 -0
- data/test/sass/results/units.css +11 -0
- data/test/sass/script_test.rb +258 -0
- data/test/sass/templates/import.sass +1 -1
- data/test/sass/templates/importee.sass +7 -2
- data/test/sass/templates/line_numbers.sass +13 -0
- data/test/sass/templates/{constants.sass → script.sass} +11 -10
- data/test/sass/templates/subdir/nested_subdir/_nested_partial.sass +2 -0
- data/test/sass/templates/subdir/subdir.sass +2 -2
- data/test/sass/templates/units.sass +11 -0
- data/test/test_helper.rb +14 -0
- metadata +77 -19
- data/FAQ +0 -138
- data/README.rdoc +0 -319
- data/lib/sass/constant.rb +0 -216
- data/lib/sass/constant/color.rb +0 -101
- data/lib/sass/constant/literal.rb +0 -54
- data/lib/sass/constant/nil.rb +0 -9
- data/lib/sass/constant/number.rb +0 -87
- data/lib/sass/constant/operation.rb +0 -30
- data/lib/sass/constant/string.rb +0 -22
- data/lib/sass/tree/attr_node.rb +0 -57
- data/lib/sass/tree/value_node.rb +0 -20
data/.yardopts
ADDED
data/MIT-LICENSE
CHANGED
data/README.md
ADDED
@@ -0,0 +1,347 @@
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# Haml and Sass
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Haml and Sass are templating engines
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for the two most common types of documents on the web:
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HTML and CSS, respectively.
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They are designed to make it both easier and more pleasant
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to code HTML and CSS documents,
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by eliminating redundancy,
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reflecting the underlying structure that the document represents,
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and providing elegant, easily understandable, and powerful syntax.
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## Using
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Haml and Sass can be used from the command line
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or as part of a Ruby web framework.
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The first step is to install the gem:
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gem install haml
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After you convert some HTML to Haml or some CSS to Sass,
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you can run
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haml document.haml
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sass style.sass
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to compile them.
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For more information on these commands, check out
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haml --help
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sass --help
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To install Haml and Sass as a Rails plugin,
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just run `haml --rails path/to/rails/app`
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and both Haml and Sass will be installed.
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Views with the `.html.haml` extension will automatically use Haml.
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Sass is a little more complicated;
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`.sass` files should be placed in `public/stylesheets/sass`,
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where they'll be automatically compiled
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to corresponding CSS files in `public/stylesheets` when needed
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(the Sass template directory is customizable...
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see [the Sass reference](http://sass-lang.com/docs/yardoc/SASS_REFERENCE.md.html#template_location-option) for details).
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For Merb, `.html.haml` views will work without any further modification.
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To enable Sass, you also need to add a dependency.
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To do so, just add
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dependency "merb-haml"
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to `config/dependencies.rb` (or `config/init.rb` in a flat/very flat Merb application).
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Then it'll work just like it does in Rails.
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To use Haml and Sass programatically,
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check out the [YARD documentation](http://haml-lang.com/docs/yardoc).
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## Formatting
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### Haml
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The most basic element of Haml
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is a shorthand for creating HTML:
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%tagname{:attr1 => 'value1', :attr2 => 'value2'} Contents
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No end-tag is needed; Haml handles that automatically.
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If you prefer HTML-style attributes, you can also use:
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%tagname(attr1='value1' attr2='value2') Contents
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Adding `class` and `id` attributes is even easier.
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Haml uses the same syntax as the CSS that styles the document:
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%tagname#id.class
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In fact, when you're using the `<div>` tag,
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it becomes _even easier_.
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Because `<div>` is such a common element,
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a tag without a name defaults to a div. So
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#foo Hello!
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becomes
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<div id='foo'>Hello!</div>
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Haml uses indentation
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to bring the individual elements to represent the HTML structure.
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A tag's children are indented beneath than the parent tag.
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Again, a closing tag is automatically added.
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For example:
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%ul
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%li Salt
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%li Pepper
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becomes:
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<ul>
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<li>Salt</li>
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<li>Pepper</li>
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</ul>
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You can also put plain text as a child of an element:
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%p
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Hello,
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World!
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It's also possible to embed Ruby code into Haml documents.
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An equals sign, `=`, will output the result of the code.
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A hyphen, `-`, will run the code but not output the result.
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You can even use control statements
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like `if` and `while`:
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%p
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Date/Time:
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- now = DateTime.now
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%strong= now
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- if now > DateTime.parse("December 31, 2006")
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= "Happy new " + "year!"
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Haml provides far more tools than those presented here.
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Check out the reference documentation in the Haml module.
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### Sass
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At its most basic,
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Sass is just another way of writing CSS.
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Although it's very much like normal CSS,
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the basic syntax offers a few helpful features:
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indentation indicates the properties in a rule,
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rather than non-DRY brackets;
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and newlines indicate the end of a properties,
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rather than a semicolon.
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For example:
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#main
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background-color: #f00
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width: 98%
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becomes:
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#main {
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background-color: #f00;
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width: 98% }
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However, Sass provides much more than a way to make CSS look nice.
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In CSS, it's important to have accurate selectors,
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so your styles don't just apply to everything.
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However, in order to do this,
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you need to use nested element selectors.
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These get very ugly very quickly.
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I'm sure everyone's had to write something like
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"#main .sidebar .top p h1 a",
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followed by
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"#main .sidebar .top p h1 a:visited" and
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"#main .sidebar .top p h1 a:hover".
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Well, Sass gets rid of that.
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Like Haml, it uses indentation to indicate the structure of the document.
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So, what was:
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#main {
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width: 90%;
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}
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#main p {
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border-style: solid;
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border-width: 1px;
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border-color: #00f;
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}
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#main p a {
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text-decoration: none;
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font-weight: bold;
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}
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#main p a:hover {
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text-decoration: underline;
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}
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becomes:
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#main
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width: 90%
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p
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border-style: solid
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border-width: 1px
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border-color: #00f
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a
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text-decoration: none
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font-weight: bold
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a:hover
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text-decoration: underline
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Pretty nice, no? Well, it gets better.
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One of the main complaints against CSS is that it doesn't allow variables.
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What if have a color or a width you re-use all the time?
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In CSS, you just have to re-type it each time,
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which is a nightmare when you decide to change it later.
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Not so for Sass!
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You can use the `!` character to set variables.
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Then, if you put `=` after your property name,
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you can set it to a variable.
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For example:
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!note_bg= #55aaff
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#main
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width: 70%
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.note
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background-color = !note_bg
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p
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width: 5em
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background-color = !note_bg
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becomes:
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#main {
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width: 70%; }
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#main .note {
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background-color: #55aaff; }
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#main p {
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width: 5em;
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background-color: #55aaff; }
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You can even do simple arithmetic operations with variables,
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adding numbers and even colors together:
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!main_bg= #46ar12
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!main_width= 40em
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#main
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background-color = !main_bg
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width = !main_width
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.sidebar
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background-color = !main_bg + #333333
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width = !main_width - 25em
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becomes:
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#main {
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background-color: #46a312;
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width: 40em; }
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#main .sidebar {
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background-color: #79d645;
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width: 15em; }
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Taking the idea of variables a bit further are mixins.
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These let you group whole bunches of CSS properties into a single
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directive and then include those anywhere you want:
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=blue-border
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border:
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color: blue
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width: 2px
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style: dotted
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.comment
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+blue-border
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padding: 2px
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margin: 10px 0
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.reply
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+blue-border
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becomes:
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.comment {
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border-color: blue;
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border-width: 2px;
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border-style: dotted;
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padding: 2px;
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margin: 10px 0;
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}
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.reply {
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border-color: blue;
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border-width: 2px;
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border-style: dotted;
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}
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A comprehensive list of features is in
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the documentation for the Sass module.
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## Indentation
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Indentation can be made up of one or more tabs or spaces.
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However, indentation must be consistent within a given document.
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Hard tabs and spaces can't be mixed,
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and the same number of tabs or spaces must be used throughout.
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## Executables
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The Haml gem includes several executables that are useful
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for dealing with Haml and Sass from the command line.
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### `haml`
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The `haml` executable transforms a source Haml file into HTML.
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See `haml --help` for further information and options.
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### `sass`
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The `sass` executable transforms a source Sass file into CSS.
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See `sass --help` for further information and options.
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### `html2haml`
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The `html2haml` executable attempts to transform HTML,
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optionally with ERB markup, into Haml code.
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Since HTML is so variable, this transformation is not always perfect;
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it's a good idea to have a human check the output of this tool.
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See `html2haml --help` for further information and options.
|
310
|
+
|
311
|
+
### `css2sass`
|
312
|
+
|
313
|
+
The `css2sass` executable attempts to transform CSS into Sass code.
|
314
|
+
This transformation attempts to use Sass nesting where possible.
|
315
|
+
See `css2sass --help` for further information and options.
|
316
|
+
|
317
|
+
## Authors
|
318
|
+
|
319
|
+
Haml and Sass were created by [Hampton Catlin](http://hamptoncatlin.com)
|
320
|
+
(hcatlin) and he is the author of the original implementation. However, Hampton
|
321
|
+
doesn't even know his way around the code anymore and now occasionally consults
|
322
|
+
on the language issues. Hampton lives in Jacksonville, Florida and is the lead
|
323
|
+
mobile developer for Wikimedia.
|
324
|
+
|
325
|
+
[Nathan Weizenbaum](http://nex-3.com) is the primary developer and architect of
|
326
|
+
the "modern" Ruby implementation of Haml. His hard work has kept the project
|
327
|
+
alive by endlessly answering forum posts, fixing bugs, refactoring, finding
|
328
|
+
speed improvements, writing documentation, implementing new features, and
|
329
|
+
getting Hampton coffee (a fitting task for a boy-genius). Nathan lives in
|
330
|
+
Seattle, Washington and while not being a student at the University of
|
331
|
+
Washington or working at an internship, he consults for Unspace Interactive.
|
332
|
+
|
333
|
+
[Chris Eppstein](http://acts-as-architect.blogspot.com) is a core contributor to
|
334
|
+
Sass and the creator of Compass, the first Sass-based framework. Chris focuses
|
335
|
+
on making Sass more powerful, easy to use, and on ways to speed its adoption
|
336
|
+
through the web development community. Chris lives in San Jose, California with
|
337
|
+
his wife and daughter. He is the Software Architect for
|
338
|
+
[Caring.com](http://caring.com), a website devoted to the 34 Million caregivers
|
339
|
+
whose parents are sick or elderly, that uses Haml and Sass.
|
340
|
+
|
341
|
+
If you use this software, you must pay Hampton a compliment. And
|
342
|
+
buy Nathan some jelly beans. Maybe pet a kitten. Yeah. Pet that kitty.
|
343
|
+
|
344
|
+
Some of the work on Haml was supported by Unspace Interactive.
|
345
|
+
|
346
|
+
Beyond that, the implementation is licensed under the MIT License.
|
347
|
+
Okay, fine, I guess that means compliments aren't __required__.
|
data/Rakefile
CHANGED
@@ -48,9 +48,10 @@ end
|
|
48
48
|
task :revision_file do
|
49
49
|
require 'lib/haml'
|
50
50
|
|
51
|
-
|
51
|
+
release = Rake.application.top_level_tasks.include?('release') || File.exist?('EDGE_GEM_VERSION')
|
52
|
+
if Haml.version[:rev] && !release
|
52
53
|
File.open('REVISION', 'w') { |f| f.puts Haml.version[:rev] }
|
53
|
-
elsif
|
54
|
+
elsif release
|
54
55
|
File.open('REVISION', 'w') { |f| f.puts "(release)" }
|
55
56
|
else
|
56
57
|
File.open('REVISION', 'w') { |f| f.puts "(unknown)" }
|
@@ -70,8 +71,9 @@ end
|
|
70
71
|
|
71
72
|
desc "Release a new Haml package to Rubyforge. Requires the NAME and VERSION flags."
|
72
73
|
task :release => [:package] do
|
73
|
-
name
|
74
|
-
|
74
|
+
name = File.read("VERSION_NAME").strip
|
75
|
+
version = File.read("VERSION").strip
|
76
|
+
raise "VERSION_NAME must not be 'Bleeding Edge'" if name == "Bleeding Edge"
|
75
77
|
sh %{rubyforge login}
|
76
78
|
sh %{rubyforge add_release haml haml "#{name} (v#{version})" pkg/haml-#{version}.gem}
|
77
79
|
sh %{rubyforge add_file haml haml "#{name} (v#{version})" pkg/haml-#{version}.tar.gz}
|
@@ -79,27 +81,92 @@ task :release => [:package] do
|
|
79
81
|
sh %{rubyforge add_file haml haml "#{name} (v#{version})" pkg/haml-#{version}.zip}
|
80
82
|
end
|
81
83
|
|
84
|
+
task :release_edge do
|
85
|
+
ensure_git_cleanup do
|
86
|
+
puts "#{'=' * 50} Running rake release_edge"
|
87
|
+
|
88
|
+
sh %{git checkout edge-gem}
|
89
|
+
sh %{git reset --hard origin/edge-gem}
|
90
|
+
sh %{git merge origin/master}
|
91
|
+
|
92
|
+
# Get the current master branch version
|
93
|
+
version = File.read('VERSION').strip.split('.').map {|n| n.to_i}
|
94
|
+
unless version[1] % 2 == 1 && version[2] == 0
|
95
|
+
raise "#{version.join('.')} is not a development version"
|
96
|
+
end
|
97
|
+
|
98
|
+
# Bump the edge gem version
|
99
|
+
edge_version = File.read('EDGE_GEM_VERSION').strip.split('.').map {|n| n.to_i}
|
100
|
+
if edge_version[0..1] != version[0..1]
|
101
|
+
# A new master branch version was released, reset the edge gem version
|
102
|
+
edge_version[0..1] = version[0..1]
|
103
|
+
edge_version[2] = 0
|
104
|
+
else
|
105
|
+
# Just bump the teeny version
|
106
|
+
edge_version[2] += 1
|
107
|
+
end
|
108
|
+
edge_version = edge_version.join('.')
|
109
|
+
File.open('EDGE_GEM_VERSION', 'w') {|f| f.puts(edge_version)}
|
110
|
+
sh %{git commit -m "Bump edge gem version to #{edge_version}." EDGE_GEM_VERSION}
|
111
|
+
sh %{git push origin edge-gem}
|
112
|
+
|
113
|
+
# Package the edge gem with the proper version
|
114
|
+
File.open('VERSION', 'w') {|f| f.puts(edge_version)}
|
115
|
+
sh %{rake package}
|
116
|
+
sh %{git checkout VERSION}
|
117
|
+
|
118
|
+
sh %{rubyforge login}
|
119
|
+
sh %{rubyforge add_release haml haml-edge "Bleeding Edge (v#{edge_version})" pkg/haml-edge-#{edge_version}.gem}
|
120
|
+
end
|
121
|
+
end
|
122
|
+
|
123
|
+
task :watch_for_update do
|
124
|
+
sh %{ruby extra/update_watch.rb}
|
125
|
+
end
|
126
|
+
|
82
127
|
# ----- Documentation -----
|
83
128
|
|
129
|
+
task :rdoc do
|
130
|
+
puts '=' * 100, <<END, '=' * 100
|
131
|
+
Haml uses the YARD documentation system (http://github.com/lsegal/yard).
|
132
|
+
Install the yard gem and then run "rake doc".
|
133
|
+
END
|
134
|
+
end
|
135
|
+
|
84
136
|
begin
|
85
|
-
require '
|
137
|
+
require 'yard'
|
138
|
+
|
139
|
+
YARD::Rake::YardocTask.new do |t|
|
140
|
+
t.files = FileList.new('lib/**/*.rb') do |list|
|
141
|
+
list.exclude('lib/haml/template/*.rb')
|
142
|
+
list.exclude('lib/haml/helpers/action_view_mods.rb')
|
143
|
+
end.to_a
|
144
|
+
t.options << '--use-cache' if Rake.application.top_level_tasks.include?('redoc')
|
145
|
+
t.options += FileList.new('yard/*.rb').to_a.map {|f| ['-e', f]}.flatten
|
146
|
+
files = FileList.new('doc-src/*').to_a.sort_by {|s| s.size} + %w[MIT-LICENSE VERSION]
|
147
|
+
t.options << '--files' << files.join(',')
|
148
|
+
end
|
149
|
+
Rake::Task['yardoc'].instance_variable_set('@comment', nil)
|
150
|
+
|
151
|
+
desc "Generate Documentation"
|
152
|
+
task :doc => :yardoc
|
153
|
+
task :redoc => :yardoc
|
86
154
|
rescue LoadError
|
87
|
-
|
155
|
+
desc "Generate Documentation"
|
156
|
+
task :doc => :rdoc
|
157
|
+
task :yardoc => :rdoc
|
88
158
|
end
|
89
159
|
|
90
|
-
|
91
|
-
|
92
|
-
|
93
|
-
|
94
|
-
|
95
|
-
|
96
|
-
|
97
|
-
|
98
|
-
|
99
|
-
|
100
|
-
rdoc.rdoc_files.exclude('lib/sass/tree/*')
|
101
|
-
rdoc.rdoc_dir = 'rdoc'
|
102
|
-
rdoc.main = 'README.rdoc'
|
160
|
+
task :pages do
|
161
|
+
ensure_git_cleanup do
|
162
|
+
puts "#{'=' * 50} Running rake pages PROJ=#{ENV["PROJ"].inspect}"
|
163
|
+
raise 'No ENV["PROJ"]!' unless proj = ENV["PROJ"]
|
164
|
+
sh %{git checkout #{proj}-pages}
|
165
|
+
sh %{git reset --hard origin/#{proj}-pages}
|
166
|
+
|
167
|
+
sh %{rake build --trace}
|
168
|
+
sh %{rsync -av --delete site/ /var/www/#{proj}-pages}
|
169
|
+
end
|
103
170
|
end
|
104
171
|
|
105
172
|
# ----- Coverage -----
|
@@ -183,3 +250,41 @@ namespace :test do
|
|
183
250
|
end
|
184
251
|
end
|
185
252
|
end
|
253
|
+
|
254
|
+
# ----- Handling Updates -----
|
255
|
+
|
256
|
+
def ensure_git_cleanup
|
257
|
+
yield
|
258
|
+
ensure
|
259
|
+
sh %{git reset --hard HEAD}
|
260
|
+
sh %{git clean -xdf}
|
261
|
+
sh %{git checkout master}
|
262
|
+
end
|
263
|
+
|
264
|
+
task :handle_update do
|
265
|
+
unless ENV["REF"] =~ %r{^refs/heads/(master|(?:haml|sass)-pages)$}
|
266
|
+
puts "#{'=' * 20} Ignoring rake handle_update REF=#{ENV["REF"].inspect}"
|
267
|
+
next
|
268
|
+
end
|
269
|
+
branch = $1
|
270
|
+
|
271
|
+
puts
|
272
|
+
puts
|
273
|
+
puts '=' * 150
|
274
|
+
puts "Running rake handle_update REF=#{ENV["REF"].inspect}"
|
275
|
+
|
276
|
+
sh %{git checkout master}
|
277
|
+
sh %{git fetch origin}
|
278
|
+
sh %{git reset --hard origin/master}
|
279
|
+
|
280
|
+
if branch == "master"
|
281
|
+
sh %{rake release_edge --trace}
|
282
|
+
sh %{rake pages --trace PROJ=haml}
|
283
|
+
sh %{rake pages --trace PROJ=sass}
|
284
|
+
elsif branch =~ /^(haml|sass)-pages$/
|
285
|
+
sh %{rake pages --trace PROJ=#{$1}}
|
286
|
+
end
|
287
|
+
|
288
|
+
puts 'Done running handle_update'
|
289
|
+
puts '=' * 150
|
290
|
+
end
|