惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
PCI Perspectives
PCI Perspectives
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
www.infosecurity-magazine.com
爱范儿
爱范儿
D
DataBreaches.Net
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
S
Secure Thoughts
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
博客园 - 【当耐特】
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
钛媒体:引领未来商业与生活新知
博客园 - 叶小钗
P
Proofpoint News Feed
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
T
ThreatConnect
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
T
Threatpost
The Register - Security
The Register - Security
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
博客园 - Franky
Recorded Future
Recorded Future
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Project Zero
Project Zero
大猫的无限游戏
大猫的无限游戏
freeCodeCamp Programming Tutorials: Python, JavaScript, Git & More
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
cs.CV updates on arXiv.org
罗磊的独立博客
Stack Overflow Blog
Stack Overflow Blog
腾讯CDC
F
Future of Privacy Forum
F
Full Disclosure
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
J
Java Code Geeks
李成银的技术随笔
Schneier on Security
Schneier on Security
Know Your Adversary
Know Your Adversary
H
Hacker News: Front Page
人人都是产品经理
人人都是产品经理
博客园_首页
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
美团技术团队
Malwarebytes
Malwarebytes
Last Week in AI
Last Week in AI
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
Recent Announcements
Recent Announcements
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com

CSS-Tricks

Revealing Text With CSS letter-spacing | CSS-Tricks Technical Writing in the AI Age | CSS-Tricks Cross-Document View Transitions: Scaling Across Hundreds of Elements | CSS-Tricks Cross-Document View Transitions: Scaling Across Hundreds of Elements | CSS-Tricks The State of CSS Centering in 2026 | CSS-Tricks Stack Overflow: When We Stop Asking | CSS-Tricks Cross-Document View Transitions: The Gotchas Nobody Mentions | CSS-Tricks What’s !important #11: 3D Voxel Scenes, Flying Focus, CSS Syntaxes, and More | CSS-Tricks Computing and Displaying Discounted Prices in CSS | CSS-Tricks rotateX() | CSS-Tricks rotateY() | CSS-Tricks rotateZ() | CSS-Tricks rotate() | CSS-Tricks Soon We Can Finally Banish JavaScript to the ShadowRealm | CSS-Tricks Using CSS corner-shape For Folded Corners | CSS-Tricks A Scrollytelling Gift for Mum on Mother’s Day 2026 | CSS-Tricks Google’s Prompt API | CSS-Tricks Making Zigzag CSS Layouts With a Grid + Transform Trick | CSS-Tricks Fixed-Height Cards: More Fragile Than They Look | CSS-Tricks What’s !important #10: HTML-in-Canvas, Hex Maps, E-ink Optimization, and More | CSS-Tricks The Importance of Native Randomness in CSS | CSS-Tricks contrast() | CSS-Tricks contrast-color() | CSS-Tricks Let’s Use the Nonexistent ::nth-letter Selector Now | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #126 Recreating Apple’s Vision Pro Animation in CSS | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #125 Enhancing Astro With a Markdown Component | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #124 Markdown + Astro = ❤️ | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #123 What’s !important #9: clip-path Jigsaws, View Transitions Toolkit, Name-only Containers, and More | CSS-Tricks A Well-Designed JavaScript Module System is Your First Architecture Decision | CSS-Tricks hypot() | CSS-Tricks The Radio State Machine | CSS-Tricks 7 View Transitions Recipes to Try | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #122 Quick Hit #121 Selecting a Date Range in CSS | CSS-Tricks saturate() | CSS-Tricks justify-self | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #120 Alternatives to the !important Keyword | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #119 New CSS Multi-Column Layout Features in Chrome | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #118 Making Complex CSS Shapes Using shape() | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #117 Front-End Fools: Top 10 April Fools’ UI Pranks of All Time | CSS-Tricks Sniffing Out the CSS Olfactive API | CSS-Tricks What’s !important #8: Light/Dark Favicons, @mixin, object-view-box, and More | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #116 Form Automation Tips for Happier User and Clients | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #115 Generative UI Notes | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #114 Quick Hit #113 Experimenting With Scroll-Driven corner-shape Animations | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #112 JavaScript for Everyone: Destructuring | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #111 Quick Hit #110 What’s !important #7: random(), Folded Corners, Anchored Container Queries, and More | CSS-Tricks 4 Reasons That Make Tailwind Great for Building Layouts | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #109 Quick Hit #108 Abusing Customizable Selects | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #107 The Value of z-index | CSS-Tricks Quick Hit #106 The Different Ways to Select <html> in CSS Quick Hit #105 Popover API or Dialog API: Which to Choose? Quick Hit #104 What’s !important #6: :heading, border-shape, Truncating Text From the Middle, and More Yet Another Way to Center an (Absolute) Element An Exploit ... in CSS?! Quick Hit #103 A Complete Guide to Bookmarklets Quick Hit #102 Loading Smarter: SVG vs. Raster Loaders in Modern Web Design Potentially Coming to a Browser :near() You Quick Hit #101 Distinguishing "Components" and "Utilities" in Tailwind Quick Hit #100 Spiral Scrollytelling in CSS With sibling-index() Interop 2026 Quick Hit #99 What’s !important #5: Lazy-loading iframes, Repeating corner-shape Backgrounds, and More Quick Hit #98 Making a Responsive Pyramidal Grid With Modern CSS Approximating contrast-color() With Other CSS Features Quick Hit #97 Trying to Make the Perfect Pie Chart in CSS Quick Hit #96 Quick Hit #95 CSS Bar Charts Using Modern Functions Quick Hit #94 No Hassle Visual Code Theming: Publishing an Extension Quick Hit #93
Getting JavaScript to Talk to CSS and Sass
CSS-Tricks · 2020-04-03 · via CSS-Tricks

JavaScript and CSS have lived beside one another for upwards of 20 years. And yet it’s been remarkably tough to share data between them. There have been large attempts, sure. But, I have something simple and intuitive in mind — something not involving a structural change, but rather putting CSS custom properties and even Sass variables to use.

CSS custom properties and JavaScript

Custom properties shouldn’t be all that surprising here. One thing they’ve always been able to do since browsers started supporting them is work alongside JavaScript to set and manipulate the values.

Specifically, though, we can use JavaScript with custom properties in a few ways. We can set the value of a custom property using setProperty:

document.documentElement.style.setProperty("--padding", 124 + "px"); // 124px

We can also retrieve CSS variables using getComputedStyle in JavaScript. The logic behind this is fairly simple: custom properties are part of the style, therefore, they are part of computed style.

getComputedStyle(document.documentElement).getPropertyValue('--padding') // 124px

Same sort of deal with getPropertyValue. That let us get the custom property value from an inlined style from HTML markup.

document.documentElement.style.getPropertyValue("--padding'"); // 124px

Note that custom properties are scoped. This means we need to get computed styles from a particular element. As we previously defined our variable in :root we get them on the HTML element.

Sass variables and JavaScript

Sass is a pre-processing language, meaning it’s turned into CSS before it ever is a part of a website. For that reason, accessing them from JavaScript in the same way as CSS custom properties — which are accessible in the DOM as computed styles — is not possible. 

We need to modify our build process to change this. I doubt there isn’t a huge need for this in most cases since loaders are often already part of a build process. But if that’s not the case in your project, we need three modules that are capable of importing and translating Sass modules.

Here’s how that looks in a webpack configuration:

module.exports = {
 // ...
 module: {
  rules: [
   {
    test: /\.scss$/,
    use: ["style-loader", "css-loader", "sass-loader"]
   },
   // ...
  ]
 }
};

To make Sass (or, specifically, SCSS in this case) variables available to JavaScript, we need to “export” them.

// variables.scss
$primary-color: #fe4e5e;
$background-color: #fefefe;
$padding: 124px;

:export {
  primaryColor: $primary-color;
  backgroundColor: $background-color;
  padding: $padding;
}

The :export block is the magic sauce webpack uses to import the variables. What is nice about this approach is that we can rename the variables using camelCase syntax and choose what we expose.

Then we import the Sass file (variables.scss) file into JavaScript, giving us access to the variables defined in the file.

import variables from './variables.scss';

/*
 {
  primaryColor: "#fe4e5e"
  backgroundColor: "#fefefe"
  padding: "124px"
 }
*/

document.getElementById("app").style.padding = variables.padding;

There are some restrictions on the :export syntax that are worth calling out:

  • It must be at the top level but can be anywhere in the file.
  • If there is more than one in a file, the keys and values are combined and exported together.
  • If a particular exportedKey is duplicated, the last one (in the source order) takes precedence.
  • An exportedValue may contain any character that’s valid in CSS declaration values (including spaces).
  • An exportedValue does not need to be quoted because it is already treated as a literal string.

There are lots of ways having access to Sass variables in JavaScript can come in handy. I tend to reach for this approach for sharing breakpoints. Here is my breakpoints.scs file, which I later import in JavaScript so I can use the matchMedia() method to have consistent breakpoints.

// Sass variables that define breakpoint values
$breakpoints: (
  mobile: 375px,
  tablet: 768px,
  // etc.
);

// Sass variables for writing out media queries
$media: (
  mobile: '(max-width: #{map-get($breakpoints, mobile)})',
  tablet: '(max-width: #{map-get($breakpoints, tablet)})',
  // etc.
);

// The export module that makes Sass variables accessible in JavaScript
:export {
  breakpointMobile: unquote(map-get($media, mobile));
  breakpointTablet: unquote(map-get($media, tablet));
  // etc.
}

Animations are another use case. The duration of an animation is usually stored in CSS, but more complex animations need to be done with JavaScript’s help.

// animation.scss
$global-animation-duration: 300ms;
$global-animation-easing: ease-in-out;

:export {
  animationDuration: strip-unit($global-animation-duration);
  animationEasing: $global-animation-easing;
}

Notice that I use a custom strip-unit function when exporting the variable. This allows me to easily parse things on the JavaScript side.

// main.js
document.getElementById('image').animate([
  { transform: 'scale(1)', opacity: 1, offset: 0 },
  { transform: 'scale(.6)', opacity: .6, offset: 1 }
], {
  duration: Number(variables.animationDuration),
  easing: variables.animationEasing,
});

It makes me happy that I can exchange data between CSS, Sass and JavaScript so easily. Sharing variables like this makes code simple and DRY.

There are multiple ways to achieve the same sort of thing, of course. Les James shared an interesting approach in 2017 that allows Sass and JavaScript to interact via JSON. I may be biased, but I find the approach we covered here to be the simplest and most intuitive. It doesn’t require crazy changes to the way you already use and write CSS and JavaScript.

Are there other approaches that you might be using somewhere? Share them here in the comments — I’d love to see how you’re solving it.