by Aaron Leung (@akhleung), Hampton Catlin (@hcatlin), Marcel Greter (@mgreter) and Michael Mifsud (@xzyfer)
https://github.com/sass/libsass
LibSass is just a library, but if you want to RUN LibSass, then go to https://github.com/sass/sassc or https://github.com/sass/sassc-ruby or find your local implementer.
LibSass requires GCC 4.6+ or Clang/LLVM. If your OS is older, this version may not compile.
On Windows, you need MinGW with GCC 4.6+ or VS 2013 Update 4+. It is also possible to build LibSass with Clang/LLVM on Windows.
LibSass is a C/C++ port of the Sass CSS precompiler. The original version was written in Ruby, but this version is meant for efficiency and portability.
This library strives to be light, simple, and easy to build and integrate with a variety of platforms and languages.
As you may have noticed, the LibSass repo itself has no executables and no tests. Oh noes! How can you develop???
Well, luckily, SassC is the official binary wrapper for LibSass and is always kept in sync. SassC uses a git submodule to include LibSass. When developing LibSass, its best to actually check out SassC and develop in that directory with the SassC spec and tests there.
We even run Travis tests for SassC!
Since LibSass is a pure library, tests are run through the SassSpec project using the SassC driver.
To run tests against LibSass while developing, you can run ./script/spec
. This will clone SassC and Sass-Spec under the project folder and then run the Sass-Spec test suite. You may want to update the clones to ensure you have the latest version.
While LibSass is a library primarily written in C++, it provides a simple C interface which should be used by most implementers. LibSass does not do much on its own without an implementer. This can be a command line tool, like sassc or a binding to your favorite programing language.
If you want to build or interface with LibSass, we recommend to check out the documentation pages about building LibSass and the C-API documentation.
Sass is a CSS pre-processor language to add on exciting, new, awesome features to CSS. Sass was the first language of its kind and by far the most mature and up to date codebase.
Sass was originally concieved of by the co-creator of this library, Hampton Catlin (@hcatlin). Most of the language has been the result of years of work by Natalie Weizenbaum (@nex3) and Chris Eppstein (@chriseppstein).
For more information about Sass itself, please visit http://sass-lang.com
Initial development of libsass by Aaron Leung and Hampton Catlin was supported by Moovweb.
Our MIT license is designed to be as simple, and liberal as possible.
sass2scss was originally written by Marcel Greter and he happily agreed to have it merged into the project.