According to libsass, libsass has now the same feature of ruby sass. Therefore, I think there is no reason to use my buggy plugin.
This is a plugin for SCSS (aka. SASS) compiler by standard approach
I found gulp-sass, but it doesn't seem to support actual sass, because the backend, node-sass is a port of libsass that has major limitations.it seems to have the same function of ruby sass now and I recommend to use it.- Then, I found gulp-ruby-sass, but there are some major limitations of use (e.g. you can't use file globbing)
It's also just simple
gulpfile.js
/*global require*/
(function (r) {
"use strict";
var scss = r("gulp-scss");
var gulp = r("gulp");
gulp.task("scss", function () {
gulp.src(
"home/scss/**/*.scss"
).pipe(scss(
{"bundleExec": true}
)).pipe(gulp.dest("home/static/css"));
});
}(require));You can specify options by passing it as a parameter object of scss function,
as you can see above. In particular, scss function has a parameter named options:
scss(options)
When options are falsy, normal options are used.
As of 1.2.0, options are passed to scss thru dargs. Therefore, all options except the following will be passed to scss directly:
When this option is true, bundle exec scss is used instead of scss. Otherwise,
scss is used instead of bundle exec scss
Specifies temporary path to store the compiled files. Note that you should specify the path as relative path
