This content originally appeared on Ugly Duck and was authored by Bradley Taunt
Some designers might shy away from build tools when first starting out and I can understand the reasoning - task runners like gulp
and grunt
can seem daunting at first. So, I’ve decided to showcase my go-to setup for gulp
and explain what the heck it does step-by-step.
Here is the final gulp.js
file in all it’s glory:
var gulp = require('gulp');
var shell = require('gulp-shell');
var sass = require('gulp-sass');
/*
Build and watch Jekyll (change this task to whatever you need)
*/
gulp.task('generate', shell.task('jekyll serve'));
/*
Compile SCSS files to CSS
*/
gulp.task('styles', function () {
return gulp.src('_includes/assets/sass/styles.scss')
.pipe(sass({
outputStyle: 'compressed'
}).on('error', sass.logError))
.pipe(gulp.dest('_includes/assets/css/'));
});
/*
Compile the assets
*/
gulp.task('assets', gulp.parallel(
'styles'
));
/*
Build
*/
gulp.task('build', gulp.series(
'assets',
'generate'
));
Trust me, it’s not complicated at all.
Grabbing what we need
For our basic build file we are going to need only three modules: gulp
, gulp-shell
and gulp-sass
.
var gulp = require('gulp');
var shell = require('gulp-shell');
var sass = require('gulp-sass');
gulp
This is the streaming build system, without it we can’t do anything else.
gulp-shell
A gulp command line interface for us to interact with our terminal.
gulp-sass
Required for gulp to compile Sass into vanilla CSS.
Bonus tasks
You can also toss in gulp-minify
to clean-up any JavaScript you might be using, but for this example we're just going to keep things simple and focus on Sass only.
Maybe I'll write about my js
build workflow in a future article.
Generating the build
Our first step is to create the default task that will generate our build. In this example we are making the assumption that we’re building a Jekyll website (but you can place any build command here):
gulp.task('generate', shell.task('jekyll serve'));
Don’t worry if this generate
isn’t clear, we come back to that later.
Processing our pre-processor
We will name this next task styles
since that’s what it outputs - our styling. We start by telling gulp where our main scss
directory is:
/* Change this directory to match yours */
return gulp.src('_includes/assets/sass/styles.scss')
This next piece tells the plugin to compress our final compiled CSS, log any errors if there are issues with the build and then export it to our destination directory:
.pipe(sass({
outputStyle: 'compressed'
}).on('error', sass.logError))
/* Change this to your destination directory */
.pipe(gulp.dest('_includes/assets/css/'));
Building our assets
This step isn’t 100% needed, but I like to include it for when more assets need to be added (minifying JavaScript, compressing images, etc)
/*
Compile the assets
*/
gulp.task('assets', gulp.parallel(
'styles'
));
Altogether now!
Now we add a task that runs all other tasks in our gulp file (in this case it will run both assets
and generate
)
/*
Build
*/
gulp.task('build', gulp.series(
'assets',
'generate'
));
And that’s it - we’re done! A very basic gulp
build for compiling Sass.
This content originally appeared on Ugly Duck and was authored by Bradley Taunt
Bradley Taunt | Sciencx (2019-01-15T00:00:00+00:00) Basic gulp build for Sass. Retrieved from https://www.scien.cx/2019/01/15/basic-gulp-build-for-sass/
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