Dynamically define a variable in LESS CSS

2019-01-18 05:24发布

问题:

I am trying to create a mixin that dynamically defines variables in LESS CSS, by actually assigning them a composite name.

The simplified use-case (not the real one):

.define(@var){
    @foo{var}: 0;
}

Then one would call the mixin as such:

.define('Bar'){
    @fooBar: 0;
}

Since this kind of string interpolation is possible while using selectors names, I was wondering if the same would be possible for variable names; so far, I have had no luck with various syntaxes I tried (other than the above, I tried escaping, quoting, using the ~ prefix and so on).

Edit

I just tried one more thing, and I feel I might be close; but I am experiencing an oddity of the LESS syntax. If I write this:

.define(@var){
    #namespace {
         @foo: @var;
    }
}

And then call it like so:

.define(0)

I can then use @foo in the usual namespaced fashion:

.test {
     #namespace;
     property: @foo; /* returns 0 */
}

However, the same doesn't apply in the case of a string-interpolated selector:

.define(@var, @ns){
    #@{ns} {
         @foo: @var;
    }
}

.define(0, namespace);

.test {
     #namespace;
     property: @foo;
}

The above code gives me the following error:

Name error: #namespace is undefined

However, the string interpolation was successful and valid. As a matter of fact, if I take away the .test part and modify the above to output a test property, I can see that the CSS is parsed correctly. I mean:

.define(@var, @ns){
    #@{ns} {
         @foo: @var;
         prop: @foo;
    }
}

.define(0, namespace);

Outputs the following CSS:

#namespace {
    prop: 0;
}

回答1:

This Cannot Be Done

What you desire to do is not currently possible in LESS. I can think of two possible "workarounds" if you know ahead of time what variable names you want to allow to be used (in other words, not fully dynamic). Then something like one of the following could be done:

Idea #1 (Variable Variables)

.define(@var) {
  @fooBar: 0;
  @fooTwo: 2;
  @fooYep: 4;

  @fooSet: 'foo@{var}';
}

.define(Two);
.test {
  .define(Bar);
  prop: @@fooSet;
}
.test2 {
  prop: @@fooSet;
}

Idea #2 (Parametric Mixins)

LESS

.define(@var) {
  .foo() when (@var = Bar) {
    @fooBar: 0;
  }
 .foo() when (@var = Two) {
    @fooTwo: 2;
  }
 .foo() when (@var = Yep) {
    @fooYep: 4;
  }
  .foo();
}

.define(Two);
.test {
  .define(Bar);
  prop: @fooBar;
}
.test2 {
  prop: @fooTwo;
}

CSS Output (for both ideas)

.test {
  prop: 0;
}
.test2 {
  prop: 2;
}

Conclusion

But I'm not sure how useful either would really be, nor do I know if it could have any real application in your actual use case (since you mention the above is not the real use case). If you want a fully dynamic variable in LESS, then it cannot be done through LESS itself.



回答2:

I`m not really sure for what you want to use this, but one of my suggestion is based on @ScottS answer. On my real world, I need to create a web app, where it would show several brands and each brand have their own text color, background and so on... so I started to chase a way to accomplish this in LESS, what I could easily do on SASS and the result is below:

LESS

// Code from Seven Phase Max
// ............................................................
// .for
.for(@i, @n) {.-each(@i)}
.for(@n)     when (isnumber(@n)) {.for(1, @n)}
.for(@i, @n) when not (@i = @n)  {
    .for((@i + (@n - @i) / abs(@n - @i)), @n);
}

// ............................................................
// .for-each

.for(@array)   when (default()) {.for-impl_(length(@array))}
.for-impl_(@i) when (@i > 1)    {.for-impl_((@i - 1))}
.for-impl_(@i)                  {.-each(extract(@array, @i))}


// Brands
@dodge : "dodge";
@ford : "ford";
@chev : "chev";

// Colors
@dodge-color : "#fff";
@ford-color : "#000";
@chev-color : "#ff0";

// Setting variables and escaping than
@brands: ~"dodge" ~"ford" ~"chev";

// Define our variable   
.define(@var) {
  @brand-color: '@{var}-color';
}

// Starting the mixin
.color() {
    // Generating the loop to each brand
    .for(@brands); .-each(@name) {
        // After loop happens, it checks what brand is being called
        .define(@name);
         // When the brand is found, match the selector and color
        .brand-@{name} & {
            color: @@brand-color;
        }
    }
}

.carColor {
    .color();
}

Te result will be:

CSS

.brand-dodge .carColor {
    color: "#fff";
}
.brand-ford .carColor {
    color: "#000";
}
.brand-chev .carColor {
    color: "#ff0";
}

This is very tricky and I had to use several elements to get what I needed, first used a set of mixins provided by Seven Phase Max and you can find it here and than, the @ScottS answer was the piece that was missing fro my puzzle... hope this helps you and others that need to create a set of Variables to be part of another variable and create a more dynamic less file.

You can copy my entire code and test at http://lesstester.com/



回答3:

To follow up on the accepted answer you can also define a value for the variable by extending the .define() mixin as follows. This allows you to use a temporary set of variables within a rule.

.define(@var, @val) {
  .foo() when (@var = temp1) {
    @temp1: @val;
  }
 .foo() when (@var = temp2) {
    @temp2: @val;
  }
 .foo() when (@var = temp3) {
    @temp3: @val;
  }
  .foo();
}

.define(temp2, 2);
.test {
  .define(temp1, 0);
  prop: @temp1;
}
.test2 {
  prop: @temp2;
}

CSS Output

.test {
  prop: 0;
}
.test2 {
  prop: 2;
}

Here is a more complicated gist of how I use this in a mixin for generating responsive background images with background-size: cover; (and an IE8 fallback).



回答4:

I don’t have time to build out the examples, but none of the above are as quick and simple as defining a variable and then assembling the import based on it. Then just have multiple documents where the same variables are defined.

@whitelabel: 'foo';
@import 'whitelabel/@{whitelabel}/colors';