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Stylus supports both literal @import for CSS, as well as dynamic importing or requiring of other Stylus sheets.
Any filename with the extension .css
will become a literal. For example:
@import "reset.css"
Render the literal CSS @import shown below:
@import "reset.css"
Disclaimer: In all places the @import is used with Stylus sheets, the @require could be used
When using @import without the .css
extension, it's assumed to be a Stylus sheet (e.g., @import "mixins/border-radius"
).
@import works by iterating an array of directories, and checking if this file lives in any of them (similar to node's require.paths
). This array defaults to a single path, which is derived from the filename
option's dirname
. So, if your filename is /tmp/testing/stylus/main.styl
, then import will look in /tmp/testing/stylus/
.
@import also supports index styles. This means when you @import blueprint
, it will resolve either blueprint.styl
or blueprint/index.styl
. This is really useful for libraries that want to expose all their features, while still allowing feature subsets to be imported.
For example, a common lib structure might be:
./tablet
|-- index.styl
|-- vendor.styl
|-- buttons.styl
|-- images.styl
In the example below, we set the paths
options to provide additional paths to Stylus. Within ./test.styl
, we could then @import "mixins/border-radius"
, or @import "border-radius"
(since ./mixins
is exposed to Stylus).
/**
* Module dependencies.
*/
var stylus = require('../')
, str = require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/test.styl', 'utf8');
var paths = [
__dirname
, __dirname + '/mixins'
];
stylus(str)
.set('filename', __dirname + '/test.styl')
.set('paths', paths)
.render(function(err, css){
if (err) throw err;
console.log(css);
});
Along with @import
, Stylus also has @require
. It works almost in the same way, with the exception of importing any given file only once.
Stylus supports block-level import. It means that you can use @import
not only at root level, but also nested inside other selectors or at-rules.
If you have a bar.styl
with this code:
.bar
width: 10px;
Then you can import it inside a foo.styl
like this:
.foo
@import 'bar.styl'
@media screen and (min-width: 640px)
@import 'bar.styl'
And you'll get this compiled CSS as a result:
.foo .bar {
width: 10px;
}
@media screen and (min-width: 640px) {
.bar {
width: 10px;
}
}
Stylus supports globbing. With it you could import many files using a file mask:
@import 'product/*'
This would import all the stylus sheets from the product
directory in such structure:
./product
|-- body.styl
|-- foot.styl
|-- head.styl
Note that this works with @require
too, so if you would have also a ./product/index.styl
with this content:
@require 'head'
@require 'body'
@require 'foot'
then @require 'product/*'
would include each individual sheet only once.
By default Stylus doesn't resolve the urls in imported .styl
files, so if you'd happen to have a foo.styl
with @import "bar/bar.styl"
which would have url("baz.png")
, it would be url("baz.png")
too in a resulting CSS.
But you can alter this behavior by using --resolve-url
(or just -r
) CLI option to get url("bar/baz.png")
in your resulting CSS.
When using the .import(path)
method, these imports are deferred until evaluation:
var stylus = require('../')
, str = require('fs').readFileSync(__dirname + '/test.styl', 'utf8');
stylus(str)
.set('filename', __dirname + '/test.styl')
.import('mixins/vendor')
.render(function(err, css){
if (err) throw err;
console.log(css);
});
The following statement...
@import 'mixins/vendor'
...is equivalent to...
.import('mixins/vendor')