/lessphp

LESS compiler written in PHP

Primary LanguagePHPOtherNOASSERTION

Build Status

lessphp v0.5.0

lessphp is a compiler for LESS written in PHP. The documentation is great, so check it out: http://leafo.net/lessphp/docs/.

Here's a quick tutorial:

How to use in your PHP project

The only file required is lessc.inc.php, so copy that to your include directory.

The typical flow of lessphp is to create a new instance of lessc, configure it how you like, then tell it to compile something using one built in compile methods.

The compile method compiles a string of LESS code to CSS.

<?php
require "lessc.inc.php";

$less = new lessc;
echo $less->compile(".block { padding: 3 + 4px }");

The compileFile method reads and compiles a file. It will either return the result or write it to the path specified by an optional second argument.

<?php
echo $less->compileFile("input.less");

The checkedCompile method is like compileFile, but it only compiles if the output file doesn't exist or it's older than the input file:

<?php
$less->checkedCompile("input.less", "output.css");

If there any problem compiling your code, an exception is thrown with a helpful message:

<?php
try {
  $less->compile("invalid LESS } {");
} catch (exception $e) {
  echo "fatal error: " . $e->getMessage();
}

The lessc object can be configured through an assortment of instance methods. Some possible configuration options include changing the output format, setting variables from PHP, and controlling the preservation of comments, writing custom functions and much more. It's all described in the documentation.

How to use from the command line

An additional script has been included to use the compiler from the command line. In the simplest invocation, you specify an input file and the compiled css is written to standard out:

$ plessc input.less > output.css

Using the -r flag, you can specify LESS code directly as an argument or, if the argument is left off, from standard in:

$ plessc -r "my less code here"

Finally, by using the -w flag you can watch a specified input file and have it compile as needed to the output file:

$ plessc -w input-file output-file

Errors from watch mode are written to standard out.

The -f flag sets the output formatter. For example, to compress the output run this:

$ plessc -f=compressed myfile.less

For more help, run plessc --help