Where are compiled SCSS files in a GEM stored? - css

I include in my project a GEM which in it has (under /vendor/assets/stylesheets) a 'src'-directory with some SCSS files.
In development mode, when these scss files are compiled to css, where are they (the css files) stored? I can find nothing under neither "vendor" nor "lib". In tmp?
The reason I ask is that one "*= require" fails and since it references a scss file in the gem I want to know what is happening.

Related

Setting up Sass

I've built my portfolio site off of Github Pages. Now that I'm starting portfolio 2.0, I want to use Sass.
I've used Sass in the past but didn't have to set it up directly. So far I've installed Sass using gem install sass and have my file setup, but am not sure how to compile it properly.
File Structure:
styles.css
scss/
_banner.scss
Styles.css content:
#import 'scss/_banner';
Am I missing the compiling step somewhere? It is even possible to use Sass on Github Pages?
For my solution I replaced scss/_banner.scss with styles.scss, opting to not create partial files for a single page application.
Then all you have to do is run $ sass --watch css/styles.scss:css/styles.css in the terminal and your CSS will be compiled each time you save your Sass file. This command points your computer to which file to compile and to where.
Thanks to #dommmm for directing me to the solution with the youtube video in the question comments.

Foundation basics, scss, js and bower components

Can I compile scss from project folder created with foundation new project with sass?
Why js folder had only app.js file, should I move files from bower_components/foundation/jsto (root)/js or link to their folder?
Should user css settings includes in app.css or custom file that includes app.css?
In bootstrap sass files collected in one folder, why in foundation scss folder had only app.scss and other files in bower components.
When you install Foundation this way, you use the SCSS folder created that contains the _settings.scss & app.scss. The app.scss is what you tend to use as your base SCSS file to compile from so you'd include all your other SCSS files to this one. You can move this file to elsewhere if you please but move the config.rb with it and make sure the add_import_path works from where you move it to.
You don't need to move the files, everything in bower_components should never be touched or moved, they are there so they can be upgraded when necessary, you shouldn't have to touch base Foundation files.
I said before you should use that, but you could include the app.scss into a custom scss file but it's better to have control of the Foundation imports in 1 file, in my opinion.
For the same reason i mentioned in 2, so you don't touch them and Bower can easily update them if you require.

Does a save to a scss file automatically update the css file?

I just started working with scss a few days ago (with Webstorm), and it seem to auto generate/update the css file after saving the scss file. Unfortunately, when I save the scss file now, no changes are made to the css file. I was working on these files from a different location, so I am guessing that the Webstorm settings might be different. I thought file watchers might have something to do with it, but I am not sure what goes in the program field. I really have no idea why this is happening.
No, saving a .SCSS file does not automatically compile the final stylesheet file. What you need to do is set up a watch. There are a number of ways to do this (and a number of programs that'll do it for you).
The most straight forward is through the command line. Assuming you have the SASS gem installed (and you're in a ruby environment), do the following in the command line:
Navigate to the folder in which your .scss file/s are kept.
Run the following command: sass --watch style.scss:style.css
Note: The above assumes that both your .scss and .css files are named style, adjust accordingly if they are not. Also, if your .css and .scss files are in different directories you'll have to adjust the paths accordingly.
Remember, sass --watch then yourScssFile.scss : yourCssFile.css
Alternatively you can use an app, like LiveReload to watch the files for you. this'll take a bit of configuration, but it may be a little easier for you if you're only just getting started in the wornderful world of SCSS/SASS
Yopu can use File Watchers in WebStorm to auto-update the CSS file on changing SCSS; but this would also require installing the external SCSS compiler (SASS gem). Please refer to http://www.jetbrains.com/webstorm/webhelp/transpiling-sass-less-and-scss-to-css.html#d104715e458 for more information

SASS and Zurb Foundation - confusing installation instructions

I decided to use the Sass version of Foundation4 as the CSS one is virtually impossible to edit efficiently now.
I followed the instructions here: http://foundation.zurb.com/docs/sass.html
These advised me to install the gem (no problem) then install compass then create a project, which I did in wwwroot.
All good so far. It then goes on to advise me to "download the files from Github (grab the scss/ and js/ directories) and put them into your project directory"
Now why in the name of a fish on a bicycle would the instructions advise me to do this when the previous step on the command line (compass create -r zurb-foundation --using foundation) creates a folder already in the root directory for my project - albeit named differently - that contain similar if not identical files? There's already a "javascripts" folder with "foundation" and "vendor" subfolders that contain largely the same files - although some are different sizes.
Am I missing something? The included "index.html" file reference the "javascripts" folder so why am I meant to be including "js" from the github? This is very confusing when you're new to the technology!
After following the installation instructions I now have "foundation.scss" and "app.scss" files which seem to be largely the same apart from one (app.scss) has lots commented out. Which one am I meant to use?
It seems to me that the instructions are basically out of date. It appears that I don't need "js" from github but I do need "scss". The contents of this scss folder look like they need to go into the "sass" folder created when the project is made and the "foundation.scss" file can be deleted as "app.scss" is a copy of it.
I have no idea where the base "app.scss" file is hoping to "#import foundation" from as there is no "foundation" folder created on installation/creation of project. Maybe I'm missing something but it's all very confusing. Could someone please clarify what I need to start with and what I can delete/ignore?
When you install the gem, all the proper Foundation files are installed for you in the gem cache. Compass will pull all the F4 SCSS files into your project via the #import directive from foundation.scss.
The project docs in the Github repo show the latest Compass instructions for building your F4 project.
https://github.com/zurb/foundation/blob/master/docs/sass.html.erb
It sounds like you are mixing the Standalone instructions into the Compass ones.
If you have run this:
[sudo] gem install compass
cd path/to/where-you-want-your-project
run compass create <project-name> -r zurb-foundation --using foundation
You don't need Github or the Standalone instructions.
The steps below outline the manual steps of building an F4 project. I think you're stuck on STEP 4, so focus on that part.
STEP 1:
Download for easy access these two archives:
Foundation Vanilla:
http://foundation.zurb.com/files/foundation-4.1.6.zip
Foundation Master:
https://github.com/zurb/foundation/archive/master.zip
CD into your www root directory:
STEP 2:
Create this file:
/config.rb
require 'zurb-foundation'
http_path = "/"
css_dir = "css"
sass_dir = "scss"
images_dir = "img"
javascripts_dir = "js"
output_style = :expanded
relative_assets = true
line_comments = true
Switch output_style = :compact or :compressed and line_comments = false for Production (when going live).
STEP 3:
Copy/Move index.html from Foundation Vanilla into your root www directory.
Edit line 11 and change foundation.css to app.css in the style tag.
STEP 4:
Create this directory and file:
/scss/
Create app.scss - This is your site/app stylesheet and we'll import Normalize and F4 in it.
Copy this into it:
// Global Foundation Settings
// #import "settings";
// Comment out this import if you don't want to use normalize
#import "normalize";
// Comment out this import if you are customizing you imports below
#import "foundation";
// Your own SCSS here...
If you want to override some F4 SaSS variables you will need the _settings.scss file. For now I would skip this step and leave it commented out until you are more familiar with F4.
STEP 5:
Create this directory (files automatically written here):
/css/
app.css - will be written here from /scss/app.scss by Compass. Normalize and all the F4 CSS will be inside it, plus any of your own CSS you've added.
This happens automatically, you don't need to do anything except have the required gems installed and your Compass config file from STEP 2.
STEP 6:
Create this directory and copy/move these files into it:
/js/
Copy/Move /js/foundation.min.js from the Foundation Vanilla download here.
If you need your own app.js create/place it here and link to it last in your footer.
/js/vendor/
Copy/Move /js/vendor/custom.modernizr.js from the Foundation Vanilla download into here.
Copy/Move /js/vendor/zepto.js and /js/vendor/jquery.js from the Foundation Vanilla download here.
Later, when you feel more comfortable, you can cherry pick individual Foundation JS files from Foundation Master and concatenate them into a smaller lib here as foundation.min.js.
That should do it.
Check out this file in my www repo, as it shows a working F4 setup:
https://github.com/jhauraw/jhaurawachsman.com/blob/master/_layouts/default.html
You can also poke around there for how to integrate Grunt.js for automated build of the SCSS and JS with concatenation and minification:
https://github.com/jhauraw/jhaurawachsman.com/blob/master/Gruntfile.js
Without being as adept as #jhauraw, I did notice something else.
I installed FOundation through the Compass app. Being a novice with Compass, I too was looking for the "foundation" folder that would contain all the various Foundation SCSS files. And when I looked at the _settings.scss file that was present, it appeared that everything was commented out. What I know understand (still as a novice towards Compass) is that the "foundation" file lives within a resource library within Compass. When needed, these files are imported when generating the CSS file. The _settings.scss file with all the commented out fields is an override file. So if you remove the comments for a particular variable or mixin, it will override the originals hidden in the Compass library. The compiled CSS seems to contain everything that's needed.

generate css from scss

I have scss and css files in ASP.NET project.
If I change scss, should be css be regenerated? If yes, then how? VS can do this or should I have some other tool?
There are extensions that allow you to regenerate from inside Visual Studio, but I personally prefer the command line way.
sass --watch [folder holding .scss files]:[folder holding .css files]
If you use Compass, you can use this command instead:
compass watch
Both of these commands will tell Sass to watch the folder with the .scss files, and any time they're changed and saved, regenerate the CSS files.
If you created the project, then you likely already have Sass (and, by extension, Ruby) installed. If you don't, you'll need to install Ruby and Sass. Windows has a nice little installer that installs both Ruby and RubyGems. Once it's installed, you'll need to run the following to install Sass:
gem install sass
Once Sass is installed, you can either run the sass --watch command, or use a VS extension of your choice to watch and recompile the CSS files.

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