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Adam Crockett 🌀
Adam Crockett 🌀

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Yesterday I built Jess's modules and imports

This is still a WIP!

Think scss with js es modules and your on the right lines. Jess is now successful building as a rust WASM module and now supports the following exports. Also because Jess will also be interpreted as in runs in your browser, async importants will be a thing allowing lazy loading of CSS only if required.

Exporting

Variable

@export const foo = 'primitive';
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CssRules

@export const aBlock = .some > #css {
   background: red;
}
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Mixins / Functions

@export function foo(){
    ...
}
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Block exports

@export { foo, aBlock };
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Importing

@import '../some/src';
@import '../some/src.jss'
// Note that tss files will be resolved with a flag `jess compile --tess`.

@import { foo } from './functions/test';
// Yes you can pick what to import

// Note that default imports are not part of my mvp
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Here is the dependency graph so far
Alt Text

What I have learned

Some things are just easier to do in JavaScript (ahem, typescript) so the module system does the preparation to feed a big load of src code glued together into the rust WASM mod for lexing and more. The compromise meant I could understand what I was doing. The sad thing is that this system is synchronous and a bit slower that I would like, I plan to add some workers into the mix and get everything async as soon as I work out what can be parallel. As soon as I can I will also move this functionality into rust. But this is the nature of prototypes, they don't have to be perfect, they just have to get your attention. Developers I mean you.

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