everyone — I was looking over a recent presentation on 960 Grid System, Refresh OKC – April 19th 2011, and on the penultimate slide (101/102), the guy recommends "if you're going to use Sass, use Sass, not SCSS." Given that SCSS is the new main syntax, why prefer Sass to SCSS? Is it simply a preference for conciseness over similarity to CSS, or is there a real reason for using Sass, not SCSS?

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I can't think of a good reason :)

I looked at the whole set of slides, I think the presenter (who is also a connected to the SASS project, I think anyway?) is of the mindset to use what you know to "get 'er done"

Sass is supposedly shorter and more concise and it's possible that the speaker knows Sass inside out, but speaking from personal experience having read and written CSS for over 10 years I find SCSS much more intuitive. I do not have to learn the Sass indentation rules, and the brackets in SCSS and CSS provide visual indentation clues for nesting - which is very like most every other language uses, so anyone from a programming/coding background would be familiar with the idea of closing the nests??

.. more importantly every valid CSS is already a valid SCSS so no conversion needed to start using it - e.g. I was able to take my Drupal sheets (all 29 of them!), change their extension and recompile/compress them in very little time.. since then I've been able to take a little chunk at a time and "Sassify" it, using nesting etc. and I still like to see the brackets and semi-colons, it matters not, which you use once it's all compiled anyway!

IMHO Sass itself is too high a barrier to entry for a large project (existing one, i.e. one not built/sassified from scratch), where as it can be modularised with SCSS

So to follow the original author's (of the slideshow) thinking rather than debate pro's and cons I'll just keep using the one I know TYVM :)

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All good points - however, there is a tool: css2sass which will convert any stylesheet to valid SASS format. It works just as well as renaming a .css to a .scss - that is, it'll work, but it will need optimisation to make the most of SASS/SCSS. – Beejamin Sep 13 '11 at 0:22
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Pros: It's cleaner. Less visual noise. More elegant.

Cons: The big one: Can't use newline. This is the only thing that I don't like about SASS. See example below. The rest: Higher barrier to entry for people who struggle with the apparently difficult concept of indentation.

In SASS you are forced to stick to lines. So if you have

@function -create-gradient-from-color($bgcolor:#000,$depth:6%)
    ...code...

then you can't do this, which i find much cleaner

@function -create-gradient-from-color(
    $bgcolor:     #000,
    $depth:       6%
)
    ...code...

That will throw an error because of the newlines.

But you can do that in SCSS, since it doesn't care about newlines

@function -create-gradient-from-color(
    $bgcolor:     #000,
    $depth:       6%
) {
    ...code...
}

So I find myself keeping things terse in optional argument strings to prevent this situation.

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