@each

The @each rule makes it easy to emit styles or evaluate code for each element of a list or each pair in a map. It’s great for repetitive styles that only have a few variations between them. It’s usually written @each <variable> in <expression> { ... }, where the expression returns a list. The block is evaluated for each element of the list in turn, which is assigned to the given variable name.

SCSS Syntax

$sizes: 40px, 50px, 80px;

@each $size in $sizes {
  .icon-#{$size} {
    font-size: $size;
    height: $size;
    width: $size;
  }
}








Sass Syntax

$sizes: 40px, 50px, 80px

@each $size in $sizes
  .icon-#{$size}
    font-size: $size
    height: $size
    width: $size










CSS Output

.icon-40px {
  font-size: 40px;
  height: 40px;
  width: 40px;
}

.icon-50px {
  font-size: 50px;
  height: 50px;
  width: 50px;
}

.icon-80px {
  font-size: 80px;
  height: 80px;
  width: 80px;
}

With MapsWith Maps permalink

You can also use @each to iterate over every key/value pair in a map by writing it @each <variable>, <variable> in <expression> { ... }. The key is assigned to the first variable name, and the element is assigned to the second.

SCSS Syntax

$icons: ("eye": "\f112", "start": "\f12e", "stop": "\f12f");

@each $name, $glyph in $icons {
  .icon-#{$name}:before {
    display: inline-block;
    font-family: "Icon Font";
    content: $glyph;
  }
}








Sass Syntax

$icons: ("eye": "\f112", "start": "\f12e", "stop": "\f12f")

@each $name, $glyph in $icons
  .icon-#{$name}:before
    display: inline-block
    font-family: "Icon Font"
    content: $glyph










CSS Output

.icon-eye:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: "Icon Font";
  content: "\f112";
}

.icon-start:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: "Icon Font";
  content: "\f12e";
}

.icon-stop:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: "Icon Font";
  content: "\f12f";
}

DestructuringDestructuring permalink

If you have a list of lists, you can use @each to automatically assign variables to each of the values from the inner lists by writing it @each <variable...> in <expression> { ... }. This is known as destructuring, since the variables match the structure of the inner lists. Each variable name is assigned to the value at the corresponding position in the list, or null if the list doesn’t have enough values.

SCSS Syntax

$icons:
  "eye" "\f112" 12px,
  "start" "\f12e" 16px,
  "stop" "\f12f" 10px;

@each $name, $glyph, $size in $icons {
  .icon-#{$name}:before {
    display: inline-block;
    font-family: "Icon Font";
    content: $glyph;
    font-size: $size;
  }
}







Sass Syntax

$icons: "eye" "\f112" 12px, "start" "\f12e" 16px, "stop" "\f12f" 10px




@each $name, $glyph, $size in $icons
  .icon-#{$name}:before
    display: inline-block
    font-family: "Icon Font"
    content: $glyph
    font-size: $size









CSS Output

.icon-eye:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: "Icon Font";
  content: "\f112";
  font-size: 12px;
}

.icon-start:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: "Icon Font";
  content: "\f12e";
  font-size: 16px;
}

.icon-stop:before {
  display: inline-block;
  font-family: "Icon Font";
  content: "\f12f";
  font-size: 10px;
}

💡 Fun fact:

Because @each supports destructuring and maps count as lists of lists, @each’s map support works without needing special support for maps in particular.