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this post was submitted on 02 Aug 2023
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Programming
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I mentioned some of this in another comment in this thread[^1], but CSS has gotten tremendously better since Sass was first introduced in the 00s. Many features we used are now native to CSS, and can be used in your browser, today. Some of them are even better than their sass variants, or at least have special abilities sass doesn't.
calc()
comes to mind, as it can mix and match units in a way a preprocessor just cant. You can docalc(100% - 10px)
, which is good for all sorts of stupid corner cases.And native CSS nesting is basically 1:1 with how Sass does it:
I still use Sass or Stylus[^2] on virtually all of my projects, but its nice to not have to when you just need to get something out or write a userstyle or something.
[^1]: Not sure how to provide an instance agnostic link, the few things I've seen people attempt didn't work, but here's the lemdro.id link [^2]: I'm largely giving up on Stylus, its sadly unmaintained. My favorite preprocessor though; takes
.sass
(indented) style to a whole new level on what you can omitWait CSS supports nesting? Since when?
Also, SASS's mixins, variables (CSS has variables too but they work differently), and many of the other features are hard to beat, which is why I feel like it's almost never a negative to get it up and running on any project I work on (unless the project is a tiny one-off, then it's probably not worth it). One thing I like is that it's close to CSS - increasing the transparency - while still providing abstractions that let you save time and increase consistency across the project.
Landed earlier this year :D
I used to really use mixins a ton, but these days I haven't really written any in a good long time. Still useful, still something plain-ol-css can't do, but I've found autoprefixer has managed to handle most of my mixin needs.