I'm building a website with Rails 3 that'll let users have profiles with different layouts and color schemes. I'm already using SASS, and the variables would be invaluable if I could do something like this…
<link src="base_styles.css" rel="stylesheet">
<link src="color_schemes/users_choice.css" rel="stylesheet">
<link src="layouts/users_choice.css" rel="stylesheet">
…where the color scheme definition would be primarily (entirely?) SASS variables specifying the colors to use in the layout. Obviously I can't just link the SASS or CSS files like this, I'll need to import them into SASS.
How can I import SASS files into the parser dynamically at request-time, then cache the resulting CSS files for use later?
I've considered going the ugly route of building every possible combination on deploy, but that still leaves me hanging if I want to let users set their own colors in the future. It seems like such low-hanging fruit with SASS that it might as well be implemented.
Alright I dug into the Sass docs and it looks like it would be possible to do using their functions, but it seems like it'd be overly complicated and introduce problems later anyways.
The best way I have found to do this is to generate the user-specific template when they update their settings. This works better anyways, as a request is never delayed while waiting on the parser.
In order to allow custom colors, user-input could be assembled into SASS css variables in a string and prepended to the template file being passed to the Sass parsing/rendering engine.
Update:
Per request, here's a more fleshed-out example of how this works, focusing just on using Sass variables and a pre-coded Sass stylesheet (simplified to isolate this specific problem):