27
Day 14 of #100DaysOfCode!
Today's progress
Continued working on SASS and learned a little bit about one key functionality of SASS which are @mixins
and @include
.
What I learned
@mixin
allows you to create CSS code that can be reused and are defined using the syntax @mixin
. They can also contain styles of their own. the @include
is created to use the mixin
.
Let's see how that looks like...
@mixin red-color{
color: red;
}
h1{
@include red-color;
}
In the above example we created a @mixin
name red-color
and gave it the property color
which has the value red
.
Then we grab the tag name h1
and use @include
on the defined mixin red-color
.
Now when we compile the SASS to CSS it will make the h1
tag the color red
on our CSS file.
That was a simple example of using the syntax @mixin
and @include
. I mentioned earlier that mixin
allows CSS code to be reused and does this by passing in arguments
.
Say, throughout our webpage we have different sizes of heading elements h1
, h2
, h3
and we want a different color for each of one. We can solve this by using mixins
and passing in a different color argument
.
Here's an example of that.
@mixin some-color($pick-color){
color: $pick-color;
}
h1{
@include some-color(red);
}
h2{
@include some-color(blue);
}
When we compile the SASS to CSS it will create a h1
and h2
tag that will have the property values that we assigned it on our SASS file.
h1{
color: red;
}
h2{
color: blue;
}
In Conclusion
Of course these were very basic examples of compiling SASS code to CSS code and using the functionality of @mixin
and @include
to create reusable code. It helps to pass in an argument with your mixin
so that you can have different property values passed while using the same @mixin
.
27