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sass-asset-functions

v0.1.1

Published

asset functions for node-sass / dart-sass

Downloads

18

Readme

Node SASS Asset functions Build Status npmjs

To ease the transitioning from Compass to Libsass, this module provides some of Compass' asset functions for node-sass

NB Please note that the functions option of node-sass is still experimental (>= v3.0.0).

Installation

npm install --save[-dev] node-sass-asset-functions

Usage

Basic usage is as easy as setting the functions property:

var sass = require('node-sass');
var assetFunctions = require('node-sass-asset-functions');

sass.render({
  functions: assetFunctions(),
  file: scss_filename,
  [, options..]
}, function(err, result) { /*...*/ });

You can specify the paths of your resources using the following options (shown with defaults):

{
  images_path: 'public/images',
  fonts_path: 'public/fonts',
  http_images_path: '/images',
  http_fonts_path: '/fonts'
}

So if for example your images reside in public/img instead of images/images, you use it as follows:

var sass = require('node-sass');
var assetFunctions = require('node-sass-asset-functions');

sass.render({
  functions: assetFunctions({
    images_path: 'public/img',
    http_images_path: '/img'
  }),
  file: scss_filename,
  [, options..]
}, function(err, result) { /*...*/ });

Additional options

asset_host: a function which completes with a string used as asset host.

sass.render({
  functions: assetFunctions({
    asset_host: function(http_path, done){
      done('http://assets.example.com');
      // or use the supplied path to calculate a host
      done('http://assets' + (http_path.length % 4) + '.example.com');
    }
  }),
  file: scss_filename,
  [, options..]
}, function(err, result) { /*...*/ });

asset_cache_buster: a function to rewrite the asset path

When this function returns a string, it's set as the query of the path. When returned an object, path and query will be used.

sass.render({
  functions: assetFunctions({
    asset_cache_buster: function(http_path, real_path, done){
      done('v=123');
    }
  }),
  file: scss_filename,
  [, options..]
}, function(err, result) { /*...*/ });
A more advanced example:

Here we include the file's hexdigest in the path, using the hexdigest module.

For example, /images/myimage.png would become /images/myimage-8557f1c9b01dd6fd138ba203e6a953df6a222af3.png.

var path = require('path')
  , fs = require('fs')
  , hexdigest = require('hexdigest');

sass.render({
  functions: assetFunctions({
    asset_cache_buster: function(http_path, real_path, done){
      hexdigest(real_path, 'sha1', function(err, digest) {
        if (err) {
          // an error occurred, maybe the file doesn't exists.
          // Calling `done` without arguments will result in an unmodified path.
          done();
        } else {
          var extname = path.extname(http_path)
            , basename = path.basename(http_path, extname);
          var new_name = basename + '-' + digest + extname;
          done({path: path.join(path.dirname(http_path), new_name), query: null});
        }
      });
    }
  }),
  file: scss_filename,
  [, options..]
}, function(err, result) { /*...*/ });

Available functions

  • image-url($filename: null, $only_path: false)
  • image-width($filename: null)
  • image-height($filename: null)
  • font-url($filename: null, $only-path: false)
  • font-files($filenames...)
  • and more to come

Usage with Grunt

Using this module with Grunt is just as easy:

var assetFunctions = require('node-sass-asset-functions');

module.exports = function(grunt){
  grunt.initConfig({
    // ...
    sass: {
      options: {
        functions: assetFunctions()
      },
      dist: {
        'public/stylesheets/application.css': 'app/assets/stylesheets/application.css.scss'
      }
    }
    // ...
  });
};

See also

node-sass-css-importer: Import CSS files into node-sass, just like sass-css-importer did for Compass

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create new Pull Request