RETIRED, further work has moved to Debian project infrastructure
Go to file
Rocky Meza 331f38f3c7 Can't get tests to pass for Python3 2014-02-03 20:56:21 -07:00
django_pyscss Move the make ASSETS_ROOT dir call to somewhere useful. 2014-02-03 20:03:52 -07:00
testproject Added discover runner for Django < 1.6. 2014-02-03 20:25:52 -07:00
tests Collect static for the compressor tests. 2014-02-03 20:31:35 -07:00
.gitignore django-pyscss - use PySCSS in Django more easily 2014-02-01 19:05:04 -07:00
.travis.yml Can't get tests to pass for Python3 2014-02-03 20:56:21 -07:00
LICENSE django-pyscss - use PySCSS in Django more easily 2014-02-01 19:05:04 -07:00
MANIFEST.in django-pyscss - use PySCSS in Django more easily 2014-02-01 19:05:04 -07:00
README.rst Added Travis CI 2014-02-03 19:57:19 -07:00
manage.py django-pyscss - use PySCSS in Django more easily 2014-02-01 19:05:04 -07:00
setup.py Can't get tests to pass for Python3 2014-02-03 20:56:21 -07:00

README.rst

django-pyscss

A collection of tools for making it easier to use pyScss within Django.

Build Status

Why do we need this?

This app smooths over a lot of things when dealing with pyScss in Django. It

  • Overwrites the import system to use Django's staticfiles app. This way you can import SCSS files from any app (or any file that's findable by the STATICFILES_FINDERS) with no hassle.
  • Configures pyScss to work with the staticfiles app for it's image functions (e.g. inline-image and sprite-map).
  • It provides a django-compressor precompile filter class so that you can easily use pyScss with django-compressor without having to bust out to the shell. This has the added benefit of removing the need to configure pyScss through its command-line arguments AND makes it possible for the exceptions and warnings that pyScss emits to bubble up to your process so that you can actually know what's going on.

Rendering SCSS manually

You can render SCSS manually from a string like this:

from django_pyscss.scss import DjangoScss

compiler = DjangoScss()
compiler.compile(scss_string=".foo { color: green; }")

You can render SCSS from a file like this:

from django_pyscss.scss import DjangoScss

compiler = DjangoScss()
compiler.compile(scss_file='css/styles.scss')

The file needs to be able to be located by staticfiles finders in order to be used.

A subclass of scss.Scss that uses the Django staticfiles storage and finders instead of the filesystem. This obsoletes the load_paths option that was present previously by searching instead in your staticfiles directories.

In DEBUG mode, DjangoScss will search using all of the finders to find the file. If you are not in DEBUG mode, it assumes you have run collectstatic and will only use staticfiles_storage to find the file.

Using in conjunction with django-compressor.

django-pyscss comes with support for django-compressor. All you have to do is add it to your COMPRESS_PRECOMPILERS setting. :

COMPRESS_PRECOMPILERS = (
    # ...
    ('text/x-scss', 'django_pyscss.compressor.DjangoScssFilter'),
    # ...
)

Then you can just use SCSS like you would use CSS normally. :

{% compress css %}
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/x-scss" href="{% static 'css/styles.css' %}">
{% endcompress %}

Running the tests

You can run the tests by running.

$ python setup.py test

Please note that this will collecstatic into tmp/static/ automatically as some of the tests require the staticfiles to have been collected.