A Sass plugin for Metalsmith.
npm install --save metalsmith-sass
If you haven't checked out Metalsmith before, head over to their website and check out the documentation.
If you are using the command-line version of Metalsmith, you can install via npm, and then add the
metalsmith-sass
key to your metalsmith.json
file:
{
"plugins": {
"metalsmith-sass": {
"outputStyle": "expanded"
}
}
}
If you are using the JS Api for Metalsmith, then you can require the module and add it to your
.use()
directives:
var sass = require('metalsmith-sass');
metalsmith.use(sass({
outputStyle: "expanded"
}));
Under the hood, this plugin is using node-sass, and there are few options you can pass through to it:
Compression-level of the output CSS. Can be 'nested', 'expanded', 'compact', 'compressed'
.
Change the base folder path styles are outputed to. You can use this in combination with
Metalsmith's destination
option to control where styles end up after the build.
The final output directory is equal to Metalsmith.destination() + outputDirOption
. For example,
the following setup output styles to build/css/
even though the source files are in src/scss/
:
Metalsmith()
.source("src/")
.destination("build/")
.use(sass({
outputDir: 'css/' // This changes the output dir to "build/css/" instead of "build/scss/"
}))
.build(function () {
done();
});
Array of path names of directories to look for @import
statements. By default, this plugin should locate
all imports own its own, but if you are getting not found
errors, try manually adding some paths.
Base path to use when evaluating image-url()
functions in a stylesheet. Path will be prefixed to
the value.
Thanks to Segment.io for creating and open-sourcing Metalsmith! Also thanks to the whole community behind the node-sass project.