2

I am using Visual Studio and its bundle functionality to minify CSS files.

It returned an error when it found the following instruction:

.ui.card .image > .ui.ribbon.label,
.ui.image > .ui.ribbon.label {
  left: calc(--0.05rem - 1.2em);
}

Thy is why I wonder if that is a valid CSS syntax, if I get rid of that "extra" minus sign everything goes good.

5
  • 1
    no , this isn't
    – samb102
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:34
  • 3
    What is --0.05rem supposed to do? The -- syntax is reserved for custom properties, e.g. --myFavoriteColor: red; background-color: var(--myFavoriteColor) Mar 14, 2019 at 17:35
  • 1
    That snippet comes from semantic.css, if that is not valid, why are they using it?
    – Jamo
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:38
  • Your minifier is causing the issue, I bet.
    – user241244
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:42
  • If you can make it ignore certain rules, or something, that would be good--there's some error with translating variables, it looks like, perhaps only when it's a negative number, or not.
    – user241244
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:43

1 Answer 1

4

Is calc(--x - y) a valid CSS syntax?

The -- prefix is used to define custom properties:

A custom property is any property whose name starts with two dashes (U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS), like --foo. The <custom-property-name> production corresponds to this: it’s defined as any valid identifier that starts with two dashes, except -- itself, which is reserved for future use by CSS. Custom properties are solely for use by authors and users; CSS will never give them a meaning beyond what is presented here.

A example using custom properties:

:root {
  --back-color: red;
}
p {
  background: var(--back-color);
}
<p>Hello StackOverflow</p>

So in your case (a calculation -1 * -1 = 1) the -- is not valid.


Why are they (Semantic UI) using it?

The semantic.css file is the result of a LESS script (semantic.less). On the following screenshot you see the source of the --. So it looks like a bug or unexpected behavior:

enter image description here


Let's try to reproduce this using LESS.

The following code is built like the semantic.less code:

@test: -0.05em;

.test {
    margin-left: calc(-@test);
}

which compiles to the following CSS (with -- again):

.test {
    margin-left: calc(--0.05em);
}

The same code but without using the calc function:

@test: -0.05em;

.test {
    margin-left: -@test;
}

which compiles to the following CSS:

.test {
    margin-left: 0.05em;
}

How to fix it (a possible fix)?

@test: -0.05em;

.test {
    margin-left: calc(@test * -1);
}

which compiles to the following CSS:

.test {
    margin-left: calc(-0.05em * -1);
}

On LESS earlier 3.0 math is performed within the calc function. So calc(-@test) compiles to calc(0.05em). But since LESS 3.0 no math is performed within calc so calc(-@test) compiles to calc(--0.05em):

Essentially, the calc() bug was recently fixed and no math is performed within calc(). But functions within calc() will still perform math on their arguments (unless the inner function is also calc).
source: https://github.com/less/less.js/issues/3221#issuecomment-398610371

7
  • Thanks! wow, that is pretty weird, semantic.css is implementing that kind of syntax.
    – Jamo
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:44
  • @Jamo I do think it's rather that VS (VS Code)'s minifier is causing an issue.
    – user241244
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:45
  • @D_N, So do you believe that syntax is correct and that is more a VS issue?
    – Jamo
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:47
  • @Jamo it depends on what comes before it. the minifier seems to be interpreting the variable, and there is either an issue where the variable is declared (on semantic's part, or yours) or it's just a straightforward bug on the minifier's part. the OUTPUT is wrong, as shown here. -- doesn't work in the output as shown.
    – user241244
    Mar 14, 2019 at 17:50
  • 1
    ... but using winless.org/online-less-compiler or lesstester.com is doing the right. maybe depends on version or options. Mar 14, 2019 at 18:18

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