--- title: Compiling Sass Themes order: 4 layout: page --- [[themes.compiling]] = Compiling Sass Themes Sass themes must be compiled to CSS understood by browsers. Compilation can be done with the Vaadin Sass Compiler, which you can run in Eclipse, Maven, or it can be run on-the-fly when the application is loaded in the browser. You can also use any other Sass compiler. [[themes.compiling.on-the-fly]] == Compiling On the Fly The easiest way to use Sass themes during theme development is to let the Vaadin servlet compile them on the run. In this case, the SCSS source files are placed in the theme folder. Compilation is done each time the [filename]#styles.css# is requested from the server. The on-the-fly compilation takes a bit time, so it is only available when the Vaadin servlet is in the development mode, as described in <<dummy/../../../framework/application/application-environment#application.environment.parameters,"Other Servlet Configuration Parameters">>. Also, it requires the theme compiler and all its dependencies to be in the class path of the servlet. At least for production, you must compile the theme to CSS, as described next. [[themes.compiling.eclipse]] == Compiling in Eclipse If using Eclipse and the Vaadin Plugin for Eclipse, its project wizard creates a Sass theme. It includes [menuchoice]#Compile Theme# command in the toolbar to compile the project theme to CSS. Another command compiles also the widget set. [[figure.themes.compiling.eclipse]] .Compiling Sass Theme image::img/eclipse-theme-compiler.png[] The [filename]#WebContent/VAADIN/mytheme/styles.scss# and any Sass sources included by it are compiled to [filename]#styles.css#. [[themes.compiling.maven]] == Compiling with Maven To compile the themes with Maven, you need to include the built-in themes as a dependency: [source, xml] ---- ... <dependencies> ... <dependency> <groupId>com.vaadin</groupId> <artifactId>vaadin-themes</artifactId> <version>${vaadin.version}</version> </dependency> </dependencies> ... ---- This is automatically included at least in the [literal]#++vaadin-archetype-application++# archetype for Vaadin applications. The actual theme compilation is most conveniently done by the Vaadin Maven Plugin with [literal]#++update-theme++# and [literal]#++compile-theme++# goals. [source, xml] ---- ... <plugin> <groupId>com.vaadin</groupId> <artifactId>vaadin-maven-plugin</artifactId> ... <executions> <execution> ... <goals> <goal>clean</goal> <goal>resources</goal> <goal>update-theme</goal> <goal>update-widgetset</goal> <goal>compile-theme</goal> <goal>compile</goal> </goals> </execution> </executions> ---- Once these are in place, the theme is compiled as part of relevant lifecycle phases, such as [literal]#++package++#. [subs="normal"] ---- [command]#mvn# [parameter]#package# ---- You can also compile just the theme with the [package]#compile-theme# goal: [subs="normal"] ---- [command]#mvn# [parameter]#vaadin:compile-theme# ---- ifdef::web[] [[themes.compiling.command-line]] == Compiling in Command-line You can compile Sass style sheets to CSS either with the Vaadin Sass compiler or the standard one. The [filename]#styles.css# of a custom theme should be the compilation target. When compiled before deployment, the source files do not need to be in the theme folder. You can run the Vaadin Sass compiler in a theme folder as follows: [subs="normal"] ---- [command]#java# [parameter]#-cp# [replaceable]#'../../../WEB-INF/lib/*'# com.vaadin.sass.SassCompiler styles.scss styles.css ---- The [parameter]#-cp# parameter should point to the class path where the Vaadin Sass Compiler and theme JARs are located. In the above example, they are assumed to be located in the [filename]#WEB-INF/lib# folder of the web application. If you have loaded the Vaadin libraries using Ivy, as is the case with projects created with the Vaadin Plugin for Eclipse, the Vaadin libraries are stored in Ivy's local repository. Its folder hierarchy is somewhat scattered, so we recommend that you retrieve the libraries to a single folder. We recommend using an Ant script as is described next. endif::web[] [[themes.compiling.ant]] == Compiling with Ant With Apache Ant, you can easily resolve the dependencies with Ivy and compile the theme with the Theme Compiler included in Vaadin as follows. This build step can be conveniently included in a WAR build script. Start with the following configuration: [source, xml] ---- <project xmlns:ivy="antlib:org.apache.ivy.ant" name="My Project" basedir="../" default="package-war"> <target name="configure"> <!-- Where project source files are located --> <property name="src-location" value="src" /> ... other project build definitions ... <!-- Name of the theme --> <property name="theme" value="book-examples"/> <!-- Compilation result directory --> <property name="result" value="build/result"/> </target> <!-- Initialize build --> <target name="init" depends="configure"> <!-- Construct and check classpath --> <path id="compile.classpath"> <!-- Source code to be compiled --> <pathelement path="${src-location}" /> <!-- Vaadin libraries and dependencies --> <fileset dir="${result}/lib"> <include name="*.jar"/> </fileset> </path> <mkdir dir="${result}"/> </target> ---- You should first resolve all Vaadin libraries to a single directory, which you can use for deployment, but also for theme compilation. ---- <target name="resolve" depends="init"> <ivy:retrieve pattern="${result}/lib/[module]-[type]-[artifact]-[revision].[ext]"/> </target> ---- Then, you can compile the theme as follows: ---- <!-- Compile theme --> <target name="compile-theme" depends="init, resolve"> <delete dir="${result}/VAADIN/themes/${theme}"/> <mkdir dir="${result}/VAADIN/themes/${theme}"/> <java classname="com.vaadin.sass.SassCompiler" fork="true"> <classpath> <path refid="compile.classpath"/> </classpath> <arg value="WebContent/VAADIN/themes/${theme}/styles.scss"/> <arg value="${result}/VAADIN/themes/${theme}/styles.css"/> </java> <!-- Copy theme resources --> <copy todir="${result}/VAADIN/themes/${theme}"> <fileset dir="WebContent/VAADIN/themes/${theme}"> <exclude name="**/*.scss"/> </fileset> </copy> </target> </project> ----