1<===> plain_css_function/input.scss 2// A plain CSS function causes min() to be parsed as Sass, and then fail at 3// runtime because the argument isn't a number. 4.plain-css-function { 5 x: min(something(1px), 2px); 6} 7 8<===> plain_css_function/error 9Error: something(1px) is not a number. 10 , 114 | x: min(something(1px), 2px); 12 | ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ 13 ' 14 input.scss 4:6 root stylesheet 15 16<===> plain_css_function/error-libsass 17Error: "something(1px)" is not a number for `min' 18 on line 4:6 of /sass/spec/css/min_max/error/plain_css_function/input.scss, in function `min` 19 from line 4:6 of /sass/spec/css/min_max/error/plain_css_function/input.scss 20>> x: min(something(1px), 2px); 21 22 -----^ 23 24<===> 25================================================================================ 26<===> dangling_operator/input.scss 27// A dangling operator is a syntax error in both syntaxes, so it should fail to 28// compile. 29.dangling-operator { 30 x: min(1px +, 2px); 31} 32 33<===> dangling_operator/error 34Error: Expected expression. 35 , 364 | x: min(1px +, 2px); 37 | ^ 38 ' 39 input.scss 4:15 root stylesheet 40 41<===> dangling_operator/error-libsass 42Error: Invalid CSS after " x: min(1px +": expected expression (e.g. 1px, bold), was ", 2px);" 43 on line 4:15 of /sass/spec/css/min_max/error/dangling_operator/input.scss 44>> x: min(1px +, 2px); 45 46 --------------^ 47