I empower people to become software developers, especially those with kids/family responsibilities, full-time jobs, or who feel too old to start over. 🥰👩🏽💻
Location
Washington DC
Education
Duke University | The Firehose Project (coding bootcamp)
Interesting read! Personally I would probably use Flexbox to achieve the same. I'm just now getting into SASS and I am loving it! The more intuitive code is, the better (for me, anyways 😄)
Basically, just like SCSS. Before SCSS there was SASS.
SASS is a preprocessor that introduced a new syntax that was fundamentally different from CSS. For example, there is no need of curly braces (it is "pythonic" in this sense) or semicolons at the end. But plain CSS can't be parsed as SASS, so they later introduced a new syntax that's compatible with CSS. And SCSS was born.
So SASS is SCSS with the older syntax. I don't know, though, if the new advancements in SCSS will be available in SASS too (i.e. @use and all the rest).
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Interesting read! Personally I would probably use Flexbox to achieve the same. I'm just now getting into SASS and I am loving it! The more intuitive code is, the better (for me, anyways 😄)
Am hearing SASS for the first time, how does it operate?
Basically, just like SCSS. Before SCSS there was SASS.
SASS is a preprocessor that introduced a new syntax that was fundamentally different from CSS. For example, there is no need of curly braces (it is "pythonic" in this sense) or semicolons at the end. But plain CSS can't be parsed as SASS, so they later introduced a new syntax that's compatible with CSS. And SCSS was born.
So SASS is SCSS with the older syntax. I don't know, though, if the new advancements in SCSS will be available in SASS too (i.e.
@use
and all the rest).