Sass function and mixin to use rem units with optional pixel fallback.
Breaking change in 2.0: $rem-fallback
is now set to false
(see support) and $rem-baseline
to 16px
by default.
Demo: Sassmeister / Codepen
Compatibility: Sass 3.2+ (3.3+ for maps) and LibSass.
See also: https://github.com/pierreburel/sass-em
Download _rem.scss
or install with Yarn, npm or Bower:
yarn add sass-rem
npm install sass-rem --save
bower install sass-rem --save
Then, import _rem.scss
depending of your configuration and file structure.
Examples
@import "~sass-rem";
with sass-loader or node-sass-package-importer (recommended)@import "sass-rem/rem";
when using node-sass’includePaths
to resolvenode_modules
orbower_components
dirs@import "../../node_modules/sass-rem/rem";
if none of the above and working in something like./src/scss/main.scss
@import "../../bower_components/sass-rem/rem";
if using Bower@import "lib/rem";
if manually copied_rem.scss
in alib
folder, for example
.demo {
font-size: rem(24px); // Simple
padding: rem(5px 10px); // Multiple values
border-bottom: rem(1px solid black); // Multiple mixed values
box-shadow: rem(0 0 2px #ccc, inset 0 0 5px #eee); // Comma-separated values
text-shadow: rem(1px 1px) #eee, rem(-1px) 0 #eee; // Alternate use
}
.demo {
font-size: 1.5rem;
padding: 0.3125rem 0.625rem;
border-bottom: 0.0625rem solid black;
box-shadow: 0 0 0.125rem #ccc, inset 0 0 0.3125rem #eee;
text-shadow: 0.0625rem 0.0625rem #eee, -0.0625rem 0 #eee;
}
You can enable pixel fallback by setting $rem-fallback
to true
, but you will have to use the mixin instead of the function.
$rem-fallback: true;
.demo {
@include rem(font-size, 24px); // Simple
@include rem(padding, 5px 10px); // Multiple values
@include rem(border-bottom, 1px solid black); // Multiple mixed values
@include rem(box-shadow, 0 0 2px #ccc, inset 0 0 5px #eee); // Comma-separated values
// Multiple properties
@include rem((
margin: 10px 5px,
text-shadow: (1px 1px #eee, -1px -1px #eee) // Parentheses needed because of comma
));
}
.demo {
font-size: 24px;
font-size: 1.5rem;
padding: 5px 10px;
padding: 0.3125rem 0.625rem;
border-bottom: 1px solid black;
border-bottom: 0.0625rem solid black;
box-shadow: 0 0 2px #ccc, inset 0 0 5px #eee;
box-shadow: 0 0 0.125rem #ccc, inset 0 0 0.3125rem #eee;
margin: 10px 5px;
margin: 0.625rem 0.3125rem;
text-shadow: 1px 1px #eee, -1px -1px #eee;
text-shadow: 0.0625rem 0.0625rem #eee, -0.0625rem -0.0625rem #eee;
}
You can totally disable rem units by setting $rem-px-only
to true
(for a lt-ie9 only stylesheet for example).
.demo {
font-size: 24px;
padding: 5px 10px;
border-bottom: 1px solid black;
box-shadow: 0 0 2px #ccc, inset 0 0 5px #eee;
margin: 10px;
text-shadow: 1px 1px #eee, -1px -1px #eee;
}
By default, sass-rem now uses a 16px baseline, but you can change this value with $rem-baseline
and by using the rem-baseline
mixin on the html element to adjust the root font size. The rem
function and mixin will calculate rem values accordingly.
For example, you can set $rem-baseline
to 10px to have a root font size of 62.5% and improve readability (10px = 1rem), which was the pre-2.0 behavior.
$rem-baseline: 10px;
html {
@include rem-baseline;
}
.demo {
font-size: rem(24px);
}
html {
font-size: 62.5%;
}
.demo {
font-size: 2.4rem;
}
You can also change the baseline zoom by passing the desired zoom to the rem-baseline
mixin which will calculate it depending of $rem-baseline
. Useful for creating responsive typography depending on viewport, especially with a different baseline than 16px.
$rem-baseline: 10px;
html {
@include rem-baseline; // Default zoom to 100%
@media (max-width: 400px) {
@include rem-baseline(75%);
}
@media (min-width: 800px) {
@include rem-baseline(125%);
}
}
html {
font-size: 62.5%;
}
@media (max-width: 400px) {
html {
font-size: 46.875%;
}
}
@media (min-width: 800px) {
html {
font-size: 78.125%;
}
}