Plugin for sass-extract to convert Sass global variables into a plain JS object.
I work on a team that uses Sass. We've got a shared variables file that gets referenced throughout our styleguide and in our components. I wanted to start using styled-components in some projects and wanted to keep things consistent but I didn't want to have to copy our Sass variables over. Using this plugin with sass-extract, I can simply extract the global variables from our Sass stylesheet and they will be converted into a JS object that gets passed down to my components via styled-components' <ThemeProvider>
.
You'll need to install sass-extract, sass-extract-loader, node-sass, and this plugin.
$ yarn add sass-extract sass-extract-loader node-sass sass-extract-js
(npm install works too)
Assuming you're using webpack, you'll need to use sass-extract-loader to require/transform your sass variables file. Then you can pass the styles as a theme via a ThemeProvider component like this:
// Require your sass variables using sass-extract-loader and specify the plugin
const theme = require('sass-extract-loader?{"plugins":["sass-extract-js"]}!./path/to/vars.scss');
// Pass the vars into your ThemeProvider component
render(
<ThemeProvider theme={theme}>
<App />
</ThemeProvider>
);
Then use themes in your styled components:
import styled from 'styled-components';
const Button = styled.button`
background-color: ${p => p.theme.primary}
`;
Given a Sass file with some global variable declarations:
$primary: rgb(255, 202, 77);
$seondary: #1A93C8;
$primary-light: lighten($primary, 20%);
$base-padding: 10px;
$base-margin: 0 1em;
$base-border: 1px solid #ccc;
$font-family-sans: 'Helvetica', 'Arial', sans-serif;
$base-font-size: 16px;
$line-height: $base-font-size * 1.8;
It will yield the following object:
{
primary: 'rgb(255, 202, 77)',
seondary: 'rgb(26, 147, 200)',
primaryLight: 'rgb(255, 232, 179)',
basePadding: '10px',
baseMargin: '0 1em',
baseBorder: '1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204)',
fontFamilySans: '\'Helvetica\', \'Arial\', sans-serif',
baseFontSize: '16px',
lineHeight: '28.8px'
}
Everybody loves options and we've got one:
Option Name | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
camelCase |
true | Should SASS variable names be converted to camelCase |
As of sass-extract 2.0.0, options can be passed to plugins. Here's how:
const rendered = sassExtract.renderSync({
file: './path/to/vars.scss'
}, {
plugins: [{ plugin: 'sass-extract-js', options: { camelCase: false } }]
});
You can also create a plugin instance with your desired options and pass the instance directly inside the plugins array.
// Import the plugin factory directly
import createSassExtractJsPlugin from 'sass-extract-js/lib/plugin';
// Create a plugin instance, passing in your options
const sassExtractJsPlugin = createSassExtractJsPlugin({ camelCase: false });
// Call the `renderSync` function with the path to your Sass file
// and pass the plugin instance in the plugins array
const rendered = sassExtract.renderSync({
file: './path/to/vars.scss'
}, {
plugins: [sassExtractJsPlugin]
});
If, for some reason, you don't want to use this package as a sass-extract plugin, you can import the transformVars
function directly and use it. This is the main function that gets called in sass-extract's plugin pipeline. It expects as its input an object with extracted SASS variables, as generated by sass-extract. The function also accepts an options object.
// Import the transformVars method directly
import transformVars from 'sass-extract-js/lib/transformVars';
// Call the function, passing in your options
const transformed = transformVars(objectWithExtractedStyles, { camelCase: false });
No problem! I made this so I could use the extracted JS object as a theme but it's not specific to styled-components. It should work the same with glamorous too. Really you can use this plugin for any scenario where you need to convert Sass vars to JS.
This project is open source. I've tried to make sure it works for a lot of use cases (read: mine) but if I missed yours, feel free to open an issue. Better yet, submit a PR! Seriously, any feedback and help is welcome.
MIT