The code explained in this article has been slightly revisited in the pen afterwards. For the ultimate version of the code, check the pen.

You know how much I love playing with Sass lists. I think they are the most powerful and useful feature in Sass. It’s a shame there is so few functions to deal with them. This is why I made SassyLists.

Most importantly, I always wanted a console.log() for Sass. You know, something to debug a variable, a list, a value, whatever… There is the [@debug](https://sass-lang.com/documentation/file.SASS_REFERENCE.html#_4) function but somehow it didn’t completely satisfy me. Plus, there is no console on CodePen.io and since this is where I do most of my experiments I needed something else.

So I rolled up my sleeves, got my hands dirty and made my own Sass debug function. This is how it looks like:

See the Pen Debug Sass lists by Hugo “Kitty” Giraudel (@HugoGiraudel) on CodePen

If you don’t want to read but simply want to dig into the code, check this pen.

Stringify a list

Everything started when I realized a function to stringify a list. At first, my point was to turn a regular Sass list into a JSON-like string in order to be able to output it into a CSS pseudo-element.

It was pretty easy to do.

@function debug ( $list ) { // We open the bracket $result : '[ ' ; // For each item in list @each $item in $list { // We test its length // If it’s more than one item long @if length ( $item ) > 1 { // We deal with a nested list $result : $result + debug ( $item ); } // Else we append the item to $result @else { $result : $result + $item ; } // If we are not dealing with the last item of the list // We add a comma and a space @if index ( $list , $item ) != length ( $list ) { $result : $result + ', ' ; } } // We close the bracket // And return the string $result : $result + ' ]' ; @return quote ( $result ); }

This simple functions turns a Sass list into a readable string. It also deals with nested lists. Please have a look at the following example:

$list : a , b , c , d e f , g , h i , j ; body :before { content : debug ( $list ); // [ a, b, c, [ d, e, f ], g, [ h, i ], j ] }

Okay, this is pretty neat, right? However everytime I wanted to debug a list, I had to create a body:before rule, set the content property and all… I wanted something easier.

Mixinify the function

Basically I wanted to go @include debug($list) and have everything displayed. Perfect usecase for a mixin, right?

@mixin debug ( $list ) { body :before { content : debug ( $list ) ! important ; display : block ! important ; margin : 1em ! important ; padding : 0 .5em ! important ; background : #efefef ! important ; border : 1px solid #ddd ! important ; border-radius : 0 .2em ! important ; color : #333 ! important ; font : 0 .75em / 1 .5 'Courier New' , monospace ! important ; text-shadow : 0 1px white ! important ; white-space : pre-wrap ! important ; } }

In case you wonder, I bash !important in case body:before is already defined for something. Basically I force this pseudo-element to behave exactly how I want.

So. This mixin doesn’t do much more than styling the output of the debug function. So now instead of having to open the body:before rule, the content property and all, we just need to go @include debug($list) .

Pretty neat, but I wanted moar.

Improving the function

I wanted two things: 1) explode the list into several lines to make it easier to read; 2) add the ability to display the type of each value in the list.

Dealing with line breaks

If you are a reader of TheSassWay.com, you might have stumbled upon my article Math sequences with Sass in which I explain how I created famous math sequences in Sass and how I managed to display them with nothing more than CSS. Anyway, I kind of answer the question of linebreaks in CSS.

If you’ve ever read the CSS specifications for the content property (don’t worry, neither did I), you may know that there is a way to insert breaklines with \A (don’t forget the trailing white space). In TheSassWay article, I used it as a $glue for the to-string() function from SassyLists.

This is pretty much what we will do here.

@function debug ( $list ) { $line-break : '\A ' ; $result : '[ ' + $line-break ; @each $item in $list { $result : $result + ' ' ; @if length ( $item ) > 1 { $result : $result + debug ( $item ); } @else { $result : $result + $item ; } @if index ( $list , $item ) != length ( $list ) { $result : $result + ', ' + $line-break ; } } $result : $result + $line-break + ']' ; @return quote ( $result ); }

All we did was adding a line-break after the bracket, after each value, then before the closing bracket. That looks great, but we need to handle the indentation now. This is where it gets a little tricky.

Actually the only way I could manage a perfect indentation is the same trick I used for the to-string() function: with an internal boolean to make a distinction between the root level (the one you called) and the inner levels (from nested lists). Problem with this boolean is it messes with the function signature but that’s the only way I found.

@function debug ( $list , $root : true ) { $line-break : '\A ' ; $result : '[ ' + $line-break ; $space : if ( $root , '' , ' ' ); @each $item in $list { $result : $result + ' ' ; @if length ( $item ) > 1 { $result : $result + debug ( $item , false ); } @else { $result : $result + $space + $item ; } @if index ( $list , $item ) != length ( $list ) { $result : $result + ', ' + $line-break ; } } $result : $result + $line-break + $space + ']' ; @return quote ( $result ); }

The list should now be properly indented. So should be the nested lists. Okaaaay this is getting quite cool! We can now output a list in a clean var_dump() way.

Displaying variable types

Now the icing on top of the cake would be displaying variable types, right? Thanks to the type-of() function and some tweaks to our debug function, it is actually quite simple to do. Far simpler than what we previously did with indents and line breaks.

@function debug ( $list , $type : false , $root : true ) { $line-break : "\A " ; $result : if ( $type , "(list: #{ length ( $list ) } )[ " + $line-break , "[ " + $line-break ); $space : if ( $root , "" , " " ); @each $item in $list { $result : $result + " " ; @if length ( $item ) > 1 { $result : $result + debug ( $item , $type , false ); } @else { $result : if ( $type , $result + $space + "(" + type-of ( $item ) + ") " + $item , $result + $space + $item ); } @if index ( $list , $item ) != length ( $list ) { $result : $result + ", " + $line-break ; } } $result : $result + $line-break + $space + "]" ); @return quote ( $result ); }

As you can see, it is pretty much the same. We only check for the $type boolean and add the value types accordingly wherever they belong. We’re almost there!

Note: I’ve set the $type boolean to false as a default for the debug function but to true for the mixin.

Making it work for single values

The only problem left is that if you debug a single value, it will wrap it into (list:1) [ … ] . While this is true, it doesn’t really help the user so we should get rid of this. Fairly easy! We just have to add a condition when entering the function.

@function debug ( $list , $type : false , $root : true ) { @if length ( $list ) == 1 { @return if ( $type , quote ( "( #{ type-of ( $list ) } ) #{ $list } " ) , quote ( $list ) ); } … }

Final words

That’s pretty much it people. I hope you like it. This has been added to SassyLists, so if you think of something to improve it be sure to share!