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SassC Has Reached End-of-Life

The sassc gem should no longer be used, and will no longer be receiving any updates.

The sass-embedded gem is the recommended way to move away from sassc. It bundles the Dart Sass command-line executable, and uses the Embedded Sass Protocol to provide a Modern Ruby API for compiling Sass and defining custom importers and functions.

If you find it difficult migrating to the Modern Ruby API, the sassc-embedded gem is a drop-in replacement for the sassc gem. It provides the same Legacy Ruby API, but internally runs sass-embedded instead of libsass.

You can also use the dartsass-rails gem, a basic command-line integration with the Dart Sass executable from the sass-embedded gem; or dartsass-sprockets gem, an advanced sprockets integration with the Legacy Ruby API from the sassc-embedded gem, to plug smoothly into Ruby on Rails.

Alternately, you can explore using a JS build system with Dart Sass as a JavaScript library.

SassC Build Status Gem Version

Use libsass with Ruby!

This gem combines the speed of libsass, the Sass C implementation, with the ease of use of the original Ruby Sass library.

libsass Version

3.6.1

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'sassc'

And then execute:

bundle

Or install it yourself as:

gem install sassc

Usage

This library utilizes libsass to allow you to compile SCSS or SASS syntax to CSS. To compile, use a SassC::Engine, e.g.:

SassC::Engine.new(sass, style: :compressed).render

Note: If you want to use this library with Rails/Sprockets, check out sassc-rails.

Additionally, you can use SassC::Sass2Scss to convert Sass syntax to Scss syntax.

Credits

This gem is maintained by Ryan Boland and awesome contributors.

Changelog

See CHANGELOG.md.

Contributing

Project Setup

  1. Clone repo
  2. Install dependencies - bundle install
  3. Run the tests - bundle exec rake test

Code Changes

  1. Fork it ( https://github.com/sass/sassc-ruby/fork )
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature') - try to include tests
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request