Visual Studio 2015 and Gulp Episode IV: The Styles

Visual Studio 2015 and Gulp Episode IV: The Styles

Brett M. Nelson - Monday, May 4, 2015

This is the forth post in a series about using Gulp with Visual Studio. If you missed the first post feel free to take the time to go back and read it Visual Studio 2015 CTP 6 and Gulp - Episode I: Getting Started, second Visual Studio 2015 CTP 6 and Gulp Episode II: First Task or the third post Visual Studio 2015 and Gulp Episode III: Assigning to a Build Step.

What about my Styles?

Well we can create a similar task to handle our SCSS file(s).

gulp.task('style', [], function () {  
    var stylesName = 'styles.css',
        root = './wwwroot/';

    deleteFile(root + stylesName);

    gulp.src('src/*.scss')
    .pipe(sass())
    .pipe(concat(stylesName))
    .pipe(gulp.dest(root));
});

If we run this the file it creates in the wwwroot should look similar to this:

body {  
  color: blue;
  background-color: black; }
  body div > div {
    background-color: grey;
    color: black; }
  body .delayed {
    background-color: blue;
    color: black; }

Now lets add a reference to it and see it on our page.

index.html with style

But you said I could assign these tasks to run during the build process!

And so I did. If you go to the Bindings tab in Task Runner Explorer it should look similar to this with expandable Before Build, After Build, Clean and Project Open.

Task Runner Explorer with no bindings set

To set a task to run after build right click on the task to go bindings and select the step you would like the task to run at.

Task Runner Explorer setting binding

It is possible to set more than one task to the same step and to set a task to run at more than one step. If you want to run your javascript and style tasks after every build just set both tasks to After Build. If you want to set javascript to run at Project Open and After Build just go though the process to set it twice choosing a different option the second time.

Task Runner Explorer setting binding

Now every time I build this project the style and javascript task will run making sure I always have a fresh set to serve. This seems a bit wasteful though since we had to assign 2 tasks to to the After Build binding. If we make a third task named build and pass in javascript and styles as dependencies we can assign the binding to build and have multiple tasks run without extra work on our part.

gulp.task('build', ['style', 'javascript']);  

After this is assigned to After Build and javascript and style is removed, if we build the project we will see that both tasks do run.

E:WorkspaceBlogGulpsrcGulp> cmd.exe /c gulp -b "E:WorkspaceBlogGulpsrcGulp" --color --gulpfile "E:WorkspaceBlogGulpsrcGulpgulpfile.js" build  
[17:04:30] Using gulpfile E:WorkspaceBlogGulpsrcGulpgulpfile.js
[17:04:30] Starting 'style'...
[17:04:30] Finished 'style' after 7.48 ms
[17:04:30] Starting 'javascript'...
[17:04:30] Finished 'javascript' after 3.36 ms
[17:04:30] Starting 'build'...
[17:04:30] Finished 'build' after 3.42 μs
Process terminated with code 0.

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