Sass
Utilize our source Sass files to take advantage of variables, maps, mixins, and functions to help you build faster and customize your project.
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Utilize our source Sass files to take advantage of variables, maps, mixins, and more.
File structure
Whenever possible, avoid modifying Boosted’s core files. For Sass, that means creating your own stylesheet that imports Boosted so you can modify and extend it. Assuming you’re using a package manager like npm, you’ll have a file structure that looks like this:
your-project/
├── scss
│ └── custom.scss
└── node_modules/
└── boosted
├── js
└── scss
If you’ve downloaded our source files and aren’t using a package manager, you’ll want to manually setup something similar to that structure, keeping Boosted’s source files separate from your own.
your-project/
├── scss
│ └── custom.scss
└── boosted/
├── js
└── scss
Importing
In your custom.scss, you’ll import Boosted’s source Sass files. You have two
options: include all of Boosted, or pick the parts you need. We encourage the latter, though be aware there
are some requirements and dependencies across our components. You also will need to include some JavaScript
for our plugins.
// Custom.scss
// Option A: Include all of Boosted
// Include any default variable overrides here (though functions won't be available)
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/boosted";
// Then add additional custom code here
// Custom.scss
// Option B: Include parts of Boosted
// 1. Include functions first (so you can manipulate colors, SVGs, calc, etc)
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/functions";
// 2. Include any default variable overrides here
// 3. Include remainder of required Boosted stylesheets
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/variables";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/mixins";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/root";
// 4. Include any optional Boosted CSS as needed
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/utilities";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/reboot";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/type";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/images";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/containers";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/grid";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/helpers";
// 5. Optionally include utilities API last to generate classes based on the Sass map in `_utilities.scss`
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/utilities/api";
// 6. Add additional custom code here
With that setup in place, you can begin to modify any of the Sass variables and maps in your
custom.scss. You can also start to add parts of Boosted under the // Optional
section as needed. We suggest using the full import stack from our boosted.scss file as your
starting point.
Variable defaults
Every Sass variable in Boosted includes the !default flag allowing you to override the
variable’s default value in your own Sass without modifying Boosted’s source code. Copy and paste
variables as needed, modify their values, and remove the !default flag. If a variable has already
been assigned, then it won’t be re-assigned by the default values in Boosted.
You will find the complete list of Boosted’s variables in scss/_variables.scss. Some
variables are set to null, these variables don’t output the property unless they are
overridden in your configuration.
Variable overrides must come after our functions are imported, but before the rest of the imports.
Here’s an example that changes the background-color and color for the
<body> when importing and compiling Boosted via npm:
// Required
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/functions";
// Your variable overrides
$body-bg: #000;
$body-color: #111;
// Required
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/variables";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/mixins";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/root";
// Optional Boosted components here
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/reboot";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/type";
// etc
Repeat as necessary for any variable in Boosted, including the global options below.
Maps and loops
Boosted includes a handful of Sass maps, key value pairs that make it easier to generate families of related
CSS. We use Sass maps for our colors, grid breakpoints, and more. Just like Sass variables, all Sass maps
include the !default flag and can be overridden and extended.
Some of our Sass maps are merged into empty ones by default. This is done to allow easy expansion of a given Sass map, but comes at the cost of making removing items from a map slightly more difficult.
Modify map
All variables in the $theme-colors map are defined as standalone variables. To modify an
existing color in our $theme-colors map, add the following to your custom Sass file:
$primary: #0074d9;
$danger: #ff4136;
Later on, these variables are set in Boosted’s $theme-colors map:
$theme-colors: (
"primary": $primary,
"danger": $danger
);
Add to map
Add new colors to $theme-colors, or any other map, by creating a new Sass map with your custom
values and merging it with the original map. In this case, we’ll create a new
$custom-colors map and merge it with $theme-colors.
// Create your own map
$custom-colors: (
"custom-color": #900
);
// Merge the maps
$theme-colors: map-merge($theme-colors, $custom-colors);
Remove from map
To remove colors from $theme-colors, or any other map, use map-remove. Be aware you
must insert it between our requirements and options:
// Required
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/functions";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/variables";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/mixins";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/root";
$theme-colors: map-remove($theme-colors, "info", "light", "dark");
// Optional
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/reboot";
@import "../node_modules/boosted/scss/type";
// etc
Required keys
Boosted assumes the presence of some specific keys within Sass maps as we used and extend these ourselves. As you customize the included maps, you may encounter errors where a specific Sass map’s key is being used.
For example, we use the primary, success, and danger keys from
$theme-colors for links, buttons, and form states. Replacing the values of these keys should
present no issues, but removing them may cause Sass compilation issues. In these instances, you’ll need
to modify the Sass code that makes use of those values.
Functions
Colors
Next to the Sass maps we have, theme colors can also
be used as standalone variables, like $primary.
.custom-element {
color: $gray-100;
background-color: $dark;
}
You can lighten or darken colors with Boosted’s tint-color() and
shade-color() functions. These functions will mix colors with black or white, unlike Sass' native
lighten() and darken() functions which will change the lightness by a fixed amount,
which often doesn’t lead to the desired effect.
// Tint a color: mix a color with white
@function tint-color($color, $weight) {
@return mix(white, $color, $weight);
}
// Shade a color: mix a color with black
@function shade-color($color, $weight) {
@return mix(black, $color, $weight);
}
// Shade the color if the weight is positive, else tint it
@function shift-color($color, $weight) {
@return if($weight > 0, shade-color($color, $weight), tint-color($color, -$weight));
}
In practice, you’d call the function and pass in the color and weight parameters.
.custom-element {
color: tint-color($primary, 10%);
}
.custom-element-2 {
color: shade-color($danger, 30%);
}
Color contrast
In order to meet WCAG 2.0 accessibility standards for color contrast, authors must provide a contrast ratio of at least 4.5:1, with very few exceptions.
An additional function we include in Boosted is the color contrast function, color-contrast. It
utilizes the WCAG 2.0 algorithm for
calculating contrast thresholds based on relative
luminance in a sRGB colorspace to automatically return a light (#fff) or dark
(#000) contrast color based on the specified base color. This function is especially useful for
mixins or loops where you’re generating multiple classes.
For example, to generate color swatches from our $theme-colors map:
@each $color, $value in $theme-colors {
.swatch-#{$color} {
color: color-contrast($value);
}
}
It can also be used for one-off contrast needs:
.custom-element {
color: color-contrast(#000); // returns `color: #fff`
}
You can also specify a base color with our color map functions:
.custom-element {
color: color-contrast($dark); // returns `color: #fff`
}
Escape SVG
We use the escape-svg function to escape the <, > and
# characters for SVG background images. When using the escape-svg function, data
URIs must be quoted.
Add and Subtract functions
We use the add and subtract functions to wrap the CSS calc function.
The primary purpose of these functions is to avoid errors when a “unitless” 0 value
is passed into a calc expression. Expressions like calc(10px - 0) will return an
error in all browsers, despite being mathematically correct.
Example where the calc is valid:
$border-radius: .25rem;
$border-width: 1px;
.element {
// Output calc(.25rem - 1px) is valid
border-radius: calc($border-radius - $border-width);
}
.element {
// Output the same calc(.25rem - 1px) as above
border-radius: subtract($border-radius, $border-width);
}
Example where the calc is invalid:
$border-radius: .25rem;
$border-width: 0;
.element {
// Output calc(.25rem - 0) is invalid
border-radius: calc($border-radius - $border-width);
}
.element {
// Output .25rem
border-radius: subtract($border-radius, $border-width);
}
Mixins
Our scss/mixins/ directory has a ton of mixins that power parts of Boosted and can also be used
across your own project.
Color schemes
A shorthand mixin for the prefers-color-scheme media query is available with support for
light, dark, and custom color schemes.
@mixin color-scheme($name) {
@media (prefers-color-scheme: #{$name}) {
@content;
}
}
.custom-element {
@include color-scheme(dark) {
// Insert dark mode styles here
}
@include color-scheme(custom-named-scheme) {
// Insert custom color scheme styles here
}
}