There's no such thing as aliasing. Sass does have the @extend
directive, but the solution isn't entirely obvious until you look into the source.
Source: https://github.com/FortAwesome/Font-Awesome/blob/master/sass/font-awesome.scss
[class^="icon-"]:before,
[class*=" icon-"]:before {
font-family: FontAwesome;
font-weight: normal;
font-style: normal;
display: inline-block;
text-decoration: inherit;
}
// snip
.icon-globe:before { content: "f0ac"; }
Even if you made .globe
extend .icon-globe
, you'll be missing out on most of what makes the FontAwesome styles because of how they built the selector. You have to extend the other selector as well.
This:
.globe {
@extend .icon-globe;
@extend [class^="icon-"];
}
compiles to
[class^="icon-"]:before, .globe:before,
[class*=" icon-"]:before {
font-family: FontAwesome;
font-weight: normal;
font-style: normal;
display: inline-block;
text-decoration: inherit; }
.icon-globe:before, .globe:before {
content: "f0ac"; }
Note that the icon-
prefix was deliberate. You get smaller CSS files this way, rather than attaching all of those styles to all ~200 classes that come with FontAwesome. You can do it, but I don't think the result is very good.
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