$ cnpm install postcss-simple-vars
PostCSS plugin for Sass-like variables.
You can use variables inside values, selectors and at-rule’s parameters.
$dir: top;
$blue: #056ef0;
$column: 200px;
.menu_link {
background: $blue;
width: $column;
}
.menu {
width: calc(4 * $column);
margin-$(dir): 10px;
}
.menu_link {
background: #056ef0;
width: 200px;
}
.menu {
width: calc(4 * 200px);
margin-top: 10px;
}
If you want be closer to W3C spec, you should use postcss-custom-properties and postcss-at-rules-variables plugins.
Also you should look at postcss-map for big complicated configs.
There is special syntax if you want to use variable inside CSS words:
$prefix: my-company-widget
$prefix { }
$(prefix)_button { }
You could use variables in comments too (for example, to generate special mdcss comments). But syntax for comment variables is different to separate them from PreCSS code examples:
$width: 100px;
/* $width: <<$(width)>> */
compiles to:
/* $width: 100px */
If you want to escape $ in content property, use Unicode escape syntax.
.foo::before {
content: "\0024x";
}
postcss([ require('postcss-simple-vars') ])
See PostCSS docs for examples for your environment.
Call plugin function to set options:
.pipe(postcss([ require('postcss-simple-vars')({ silent: true }) ]))
variablesSet default variables. It is useful to store colors or other constants in common file:
// config/colors.js
module.exports = {
blue: '#056ef0'
}
// gulpfile.js
var colors = require('./config/colors');
var vars = require('postcss-simple-vars')
gulp.task('css', function () {
return gulp.src('./src/*.css')
.pipe(postcss([ vars({ variables: colors }) ]))
.pipe(gulp.dest('./dest'));
});
You can set a function returning object, if you want to update default variables in webpack hot reload:
postcss([
vars({
variables: function () {
return require('./config/colors');
}
})
])
onVariablesCallback invoked once all variables in css are known. The callback receives
an object representing the known variables, including those explicitly-declared
by the variables option.
postcss([
vars({
onVariables: function (variables) {
console.log('CSS Variables');
console.log(JSON.stringify(variables, null, 2));
}
})
])
unknownCallback on unknown variable name. It receives node instance, variable name and PostCSS Result object.
postcss([
vars({
unknown: function (node, name, result) {
node.warn(result, 'Unknown variable ' + name);
}
})
])
silentLeft unknown variables in CSS and do not throw an error. Default is false.
onlySet value only for variables from this object. Other variables will not be changed. It is useful for PostCSS plugin developers.
keepKeep variables as is and not delete them. Default is false.
This plugin passes result.messages for each variable:
postcss([vars]).process('$one: 1; $two: 2').then(function (result) {
console.log(result.messages)
})
will output:
[
{
plugin: 'postcss-simple-vars',
type: 'variable',
name: 'one'
value: '1'
},
{
plugin: 'postcss-simple-vars',
type: 'variable',
name: 'two'
value: '2'
}
]
You can get access to this variables in result.messages also
in any plugin goes after postcss-simple-vars.
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