Hi, some time ago I had the same problem and Harb helped me (you can search for
the thread in the list @users
I have made an excerpt for you:
The compiler needs to understand the css in order to compile it. Any
features that the compiler does not understand must be added to the
compiler. Definitely add this as a Github issue.
To use unsupported CSS features, you need a CSS file that doesn't run
through the compiler. What I do is add a "defaults.css" file where I put that
type of CSS and add the following line to my template html file:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="./assets/css/defaults.css">
Must be a plain vanilla CSS file (HTML style) [1]
Namespaces are not recognized in normal css.
[1] https://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/specs.en.html
Hiedra
-----Mensaje original-----
De: Hugo Ferreira <[email protected]>
Enviado el: martes, 1 de febrero de 2022 12:26
Para: Apache Royale Development <[email protected]>
Asunto: Re: Less and Royale
Hi Yishay,
It's a workaround that works, thank you (I tried yesterday before my e-mail and
I don't know why did not works, perhaps because was night) but is working now.
Ansering your question.
If I set the default theme with the generated css from less I got a lot of
errors.
For example:
.bg-opacity-100 {
--bs-bg-opacity: 1;
}
The compiler seems not not like --
Yishay Weiss <[email protected]> escreveu no dia terça, 1/02/2022 à(s)
07:52:
> It would be interesting to understand why Royale is complaining, but
> as a workaround you might want to have an index-template file that
> includes your css.
>
> From: Hugo Ferreira<mailto:[email protected]>
> Sent: Tuesday, February 1, 2022 1:16 AM
> To: Apache Royale Development<mailto:[email protected]>
> Subject: Less and Royale
>
> Hi,
>
> I compile a less file that generated a big css file (a lot of
> references from bootstrap).
> I know that this css file is OK or should be OK, however royale
> compiler complains about it while compiling ending with error (using VS Code).
> How can I compile and ignore all errors from the main css file ?
>
>