Right. That got it. Thanks!
Steve
On Mar 25, 2007, at 12:08 PM, Nathan Weizenbaum wrote:
>
> Oops... forgot to add a bunch of files. It should all work now.
>
> - Nathan
>
> s.ross wrote:
>> Have you seen this in current trunk?
>>
>> custom_require.rb:27:in `gem_original_require': no such file to load
>> -- haml/util (MissingSourceFile)
>>
>> ??
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Steve
>>
>>
>> On Mar 25, 2007, at 3:00 AM, Nathan Weizenbaum wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Hello, fellow Hamlites,
>>>
>>> While it's nice to be able to create standalone Sass templates, each
>>> website usually has at least three or four CSS files. Sass is
>>> wonderful
>>> for reducing the amount of repetition within a document, but what
>>> does
>>> it offer to minimize repeated code between several files? Is there
>>> a way
>>> to have all the CSS files share a few core rules or even (dare I
>>> suggest!) constant definitions?
>>>
>>> Well, until now, there wasn't. But why would I have brought those
>>> issues
>>> up, in a Sneak Peek no less, if I weren't going to show a solution?
>>> Well, here's that solution: "@import". You may recognize that from
>>> CSS.
>>> Indeed, in Sass it works much the same way. It imports both the
>>> rules
>>> and the constants from another Sass file into the current file. So,
>>> for
>>> example, if you had a Sass file with a constant definitions and a
>>> small
>>> rule:
>>>
>>> // shared.sass
>>> !color = #1356e3
>>>
>>> a img
>>> :border-style none
>>>
>>> You could import it into another file
>>>
>>> // main.sass
>>> @import shared
>>>
>>> #navbar
>>> :background-color = !color
>>>
>>> And this would compile to
>>>
>>> a img {
>>> border-style: none; }
>>>
>>> #navbar {
>>> background-color: #1256e3; }
>>>
>>> You may notice that I included just "shared", leaving off the
>>> ".sass"
>>> file extension. This is acceptable, as is explicitly including
>>> "shared.sass". If the file extension is removed and no file called
>>> "shared.sass" is found, the import directive will just compile to a
>>> literal CSS "@import shared.css". This makes it easy to transition
>>> from
>>> CSS to Sass without having to change the imports whenever you switch
>>> over a template.
>>>
>>> As always, this feature is available right now in the Haml trunk,
>>> which
>>> can be installed using "./script/plugin install
>>> http://svn.hamptoncatlin.com/haml/trunk" for Rails or "svn co
>>> svn://hamptoncatlin.com/haml/trunk" standalone. Give it a try.
>>>
>>> Enjoy!
>>> - Nathan
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>>
>>
>>
>
>
> >
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