![]() ![]() There are many types of compilers and interpreters that differ wildly depending what platform and programming language are used. ![]() ![]() Sass and Less are often referred to as preprocessors.Ĭompiling - converting code into data that a program or OS or web browser can understand. In regards to web development, preprocessors are used for languages that when compiled (processed) export a file in a common language such as Sass to CSS or Markup to HTML. This is often used as a blanket term for programming languages that require a preprocessor. Preprocessor - a utility that converts one type of data into another type of data that another program can use. Now, that we’ve gotten that out of the way, let’s get to the heart of the matter at hand, shall we?ĭepending on your comfort level, there’s a few items I’ll be discussing at great length, if you’re a grizzled vet, you may want to skip to the review part, otherwise keep reading. Its been over 21 months with Codekit since the original review, which is still accurate thus almost untouched. I’ve also continually added thoughts and notes at the end of this review. I haven’t seen any massive reviews on CodeKit 2 either, since its a niche market so I’ll try and make this the most definitive review written to date on CodeKit 2. I’ve blogged about Codekit 2 error resolutions which have been referenced on by people who aren’t me. While I may not be the foremost expert, I believe that I have some credentials to speak with some authority on pre-compilers and CodeKit specifically. Now that its been over two years down the chasm of Sass and a more varied workflow, I feel that I can expound in ways I couldn’t before. Quite some time ago I wrote a mini-review of Codekit 1.0 and then another review of Prepros. Admittedly I had only been using pre-compilers for several months at that time (what a difference a year makes). ![]()
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