I'm in the process of building my first solo rails app using rails 3.1.rc5. My problem is that I want to have my site render the various css files conditionally. I'm using blueprint css and I'm trying to have sprockets/rails render screen.css most of the time, print.css only when printing, and ie.css only when the site is accessed from IE.

Unfortunately, the default *= require_tree command in the application.css manifest includes everything in the assets/stylesheets directory and results in an unpleasant css jumble. My current workaround is a sort of brute-force method where I specify everything individually:

In application.css:

*= require_self
*= require home.css
...
*= require blueprint/screen.css

In my stylesheets partial (haml):

<!--[if lt IE 9]
<script src="http://html5shiv.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/html5.js"></script>
![endif]-->
= stylesheet_link_tag "application"
= stylesheet_link_tag 'blueprint/print', media: 'print'
<!--[if lt IE8]]
= stylesheet_link_tag 'blueprint/ie'
![endif]-->
= javascript_include_tag "application"

This works but it's not especially pretty. I've done a few hours of searching to even get this far but I'm hoping that there's some easier way to do it that I've just missed. If I could even selectively render certain directories (without including subdirectories) it would make the whole process a lot less rigid.

Thanks!

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2 Answers

up vote 65 down vote accepted

I've discovered a way to make it less rigid and future proof by still using the asset pipeline but having the stylesheets grouped. It's not much simpler than your solution but allows you to automatically add new stylesheets without having to re-edit the whole structure again.

What you want to do is use separate manifest files to break things up. First you have to re-organize your app/assets/stylesheets folder:

app/assets/stylesheets
+-- all
    +-- you_base_stylesheet.css
+-- print
    +-- blueprint
        +-- print.css
    +-- your_print_stylesheet.css
+-- ie
    +-- blueprint
        + ie.css
    +-- your_ie_hacks.css
+-- application-all.css
+-- application-print.css
+-- application-ie.css

Then you edit the three manifest files:

/**
 * application-all.css
 *
 *= require_self
 *= require_tree ./all
 */

/**
 * application-print.css
 *
 *= require_self
 *= require_tree ./print
 */

/**
 * application-ie.css
 *
 *= require_self
 *= require_tree ./ie
 */

Next you update your application layout file:

<%= stylesheet_link_tag "application-all", :media => "all" %>
<%= stylesheet_link_tag "application-print", :media => "print" %>

<!--[if lte IE 8]>
    <%= stylesheet_link_tag "application-ie", :media => "all" %>
<![endif]-->

Lastly, don't forget to include these new manifest files in your config/environments/production.rb:

config.assets.precompile += %w( application-all.css application-print.css application-ie.css )
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While this is a nice organization of the files, I believe it still solves the essential problem in the same way the question itself does. – semperos Sep 8 '11 at 11:49
@semperos, you're correct that the shape of the solution is essentially the same but my proposal still allows us to use the asset pipeline for the entirety of the stylesheets. I'm not sure if there's another way to selectively include part of the styles unless it's on a separate stylesheet. At least this way we compile to only a handful of CSS files. – gcastro Sep 8 '11 at 17:16
@gcastro, this helped me a lot, thanks. It was exactly the technique I needed to have separate layouts with their own assets but still get everything precompiled. – Keith Schacht Dec 18 '11 at 8:36
@gcastro, this is a much cleaner way to deal with stylesheets... thanks for the tip :) – Orlando Del Aguila Dec 25 '11 at 3:11
Something like this in the Rails Asset Pipeline guide would be good actually. thanks – Bashar Abdullah Apr 2 at 19:23
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Thats a pretty neat way to do it. I use conditional classes on html or modernizr. See this article for a good representation on what does what. modernizr-vs-conditional-classes-on-html

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