Where Do You Nest Your Sass Breakpoints?
Publikováno: 11.2.2019
I love nesting my @media query breakpoints. It's perhaps the most important feature of Sass to me. Maybe I pick a method and do it like this:
.element {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 100px 1fr;
@include breakpoint(baby-bear) {
display: block;
}
}
That's straightforward enough. But what if my element has several sub-elements and the breakpoint affects them as well? There are different approaches, and I'm never quite sure which one I should be doing.
I could duplicate the breakpoint for … Read article
The post Where Do You Nest Your Sass Breakpoints? appeared first on CSS-Tricks.
I love nesting my @media query breakpoints. It's perhaps the most important feature of Sass to me. Maybe I pick a method and do it like this:
.element {
display: grid;
grid-template-columns: 100px 1fr;
@include breakpoint(baby-bear) {
display: block;
}
}
That's straightforward enough. But what if my element has several sub-elements and the breakpoint affects them as well? There are different approaches, and I'm never quite sure which one I should be doing.
I could duplicate the breakpoint for each child:
.parent {
@include breakpoint(desktop) {
}
.child {
@include breakpoint(desktop) {
}
}
.child-2 {
@include breakpoint(desktop) {
}
}
}
The compiled CSS comes out to something like this:
@media screen and (min-width: 700px) {
.parent {
}
}
@media screen and (min-width: 700px) {
.parent .child {
}
}
@media screen and (min-width: 700px) {
.parent .child-2 {
}
}
Or, I could duplicate the children under the first nested breakpoint:
.parent {
@include breakpoint(desktop) {
.child {
}
.child-2 {
}
}
.child {
}
.child-2 {
}
}
That results in:
@media screen and (min-width: 700px) {
.parent .child {
}
.parent .child-2 {
}
}
.parent .child {
}
.parent .child-2 {
}
Or I could do a combination of the two. Neither of them feels particularly great because of the duplication, but I'm not sure there is a perfect answer here. I err a little more on duplicating the media query, as it seems less error-prone than duplicating selectors.
The post Where Do You Nest Your Sass Breakpoints? appeared first on CSS-Tricks.