rails + compass: advantages vs using haml + blueprint directly

后端 未结 4 1245
死守一世寂寞
死守一世寂寞 2021-02-02 00:54

I\'ve got some experience using haml (+sass) on rails projects. I recently started using them with blueprintcss - the only thing I did was transform blueprint.css into a sass fi

相关标签:
4条回答
  • 2021-02-02 01:22

    Compass looked like a great solution for me as well, but after trying it on a project I didn't really see the great advantage of using it for me. Like you, I'm just fine with blueprint, and I didn't see the need to add yet another layer on top of haml/sass.

    I eventually stripped the compass from that project and just go with a sass version of the blueprint CSS files, and go from there. I store any custom/additional styles in a separate sass file and that's it. No need for compass or anything like that if you just want to keep it simple.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-02-02 01:24

    'Semantic mode' refers to the possibility to use more semantic class names than the ones css frameworks ship with: .article vs .grid_1. which i personally think is a big +.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-02-02 01:29

    The ideal goal is separation of style and content: it's not always possible 100%, but it can be done reasonably well by using semantic markup. Blueprint and other CSS frameworks utterly fail at this.

    The original idea behind Compass was to avoid polluting HTML with the visual markup that Blueprint generates: if you're writing class="column-4" in your markup, then you might as well put style="width:160px" in there instead. Semantically it's the same meaning, and the same amount of repetition to maintain.

    Compass turns a Blueprint class like .column-4 into a mixin which you can apply to a meaningful selector:

    #sidebar
      +column(4)
    

    This way, you only need to maintain it in the stylesheet, not across a number of templates and HTML files.

    Compass is project-aware. It will handle compiling your whole tree of stylesheets, even automatically on save when you run compass watch.

    There are some very helpful functions provided by compass, for example:

    image_url is a configurable function that can handle relative or absolute paths or even set up rotating asset hosts if you need to.

    The CSS3 module takes care of all the browser-specific style rules for rounded corners, shadows, etc.

    General utilities provide helpers for the stuff you do all the time, but with less repetition (especially for the cross-browser issues). These are some basic ones I use a lot:

    • +clearfix and +pie-clearfix (cross-browser clearing methods)
    • +float ensures you don't forget display:inline in front of it for IE... (if the time comes to drop the old IEs, it's one single change.)
    • +replace-text hides text and positions an image replacement background.
    • +hover-link adds the :hover underline rule to a base link style

    You can check these out on the new docs site for Compass.

    Then, Compass provides the facilities for a number of other style frameworks in addition to the built-in Blueprint. Do check out Susy for example, which is a Sass-native layout framework, not just a CSS port. It specializes in flexible and fluid grids.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2021-02-02 01:36

    I'm not sure if these resources have only shown up recently, but have you seen the Compass CSS3 helpers and the General utilities - (both well documented in my opinion) - they've really sped up my interface builds a great deal.

    Another great resource is the Compass plugins page.

    Personally I like to copy these utility Sass files out the rubygem and manually include them in my project's Sass files as it feels pretty weird referencing Sass which is stored out of the project.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题