Milligram
Picnic CSS
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Milligram | Picnic CSS | |
---|---|---|
23 | 8 | |
10,146 | 3,763 | |
0.2% | - | |
0.0 | 1.9 | |
5 months ago | 9 months ago | |
HTML | CSS | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Milligram
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Concrete.css
I borrowed this from Milligram[0] because it seemed like a sane thing to do at the time. Would your recommendation be to not anything to the base font-size and adjust the REM sizes accordingly?
[0] https://github.com/milligram/milligram/blob/d895f179623b56f3...
I had been using similar projects such as skeleton[0] and milligram[1] for small experiments such as repfl[2], and wanted to create something similar that I would find aesthetically pleasing and that would fit in as little space as possible. The current version of concrete.css is less than 1kb minzipped!
- The classless and class-light CSS aproaches
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Super simple alternative to bootstrap for just the grid system?
Try this out. This is great for really simple projects. https://milligram.io
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Show HN: Neat, the Minimalist CSS Framework
Thanks for sharing, I love minimalist CSS frameworks that are easy to digest. My go-to for the past ~5 years has been https://milligram.io -- mainly for the grid and basic styling -- although, the author hasn't updated it in a few years. I'm going to give yours a shot!
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Milligram CSS: カスタム・ビルド (Node.js 18 on Alpine Linux 3.17 使用)
CSS F/W: Milligram 1.4.1
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Milligram CSS: Custom build (with Node.js 18 on Alpine Linux 3.17)
$ git clone https://github.com/milligram/milligram.git
Do you know about Milligram, a "minimalist CSS framework" ? It's, in accordance with the name, lightweight like feather, and, in addition, beautiful. It is developed "to design fast and clean websites".
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What is the best way to develop a frontend using only HTML, CSS, Bootrap, JS w/o frameworks?
If you do want to use a framework and get up and running quickly, but you still want to know what's going on and have some ability to customize it, maybe you can start with one of the really minimal CSS frameworks like Milligram or Sakura and then add your own modifications.
Picnic CSS
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Ask HN: What side projects landed you a job?
This was about 10 years ago, where there was Bootstrap, Pure CSS and little more, so I published:
It went to the front page of Hacker News (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8315616). At the time I was a student in Spain doing coding just for fun, so any job-related opportunity would be slim and with really bad pay (I had actually already worked a bit as a dev for a pittance).
Someone contacted me and offered some really fun freelancing projects for what at the time seemed like an absurdly ridiculous large amount of money, so much that I got a great designer friend involved and split the money so the project would be even better.
I learned many things from that and as my curiosity pumped me to keep learning. I read about cases of people making 500k+/year as "normal" devs (meaning, not managers, and also not famous). Most of my Spanish peers didn't even believe that existed at the time, and thought I was crazy believing those "obviously fake" blog posts. But I've been working for USA companies basically since then, and couldn't be happier/wouldn't look back.
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Show HN: Neat, the Minimalist CSS Framework
Picnic CSS:
My own and one of the older ones, almost 10 years ago, see the original Show HN:
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v8.0.2 is live!
Added support for Picnic CSS
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🚀20 Best CSS3 Library For Developers.
2. Picnic.css
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CSS Deep
franciscop/picnic - 👜 A beautiful CSS library to kickstart your projects
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Open-source, not open-contribution
I've disabled Issues in some of my more popular but end-user libraries and I couldn't be happier. Specially notorious was a CSS library[1] where many of the issues were on the level of "hey can you give me the code for X" or "how do you do X" where X was a general CSS question and not related to the library at all. I've received a bit of hate when I closed some of my repos issues as a PR [2][3]:
> If you spot a bug or any other issue you may go to hell because this software is officially Bug Free(TM).
> part of offering these to the public through open software is maintaining them and allowing feedback from users.
> It seems umbrella.js project suffers the same desease.
I've noticed there was a strong push around 2016-2018 to recommend newbie programmers NOT to go to Stackoverflow, but instead to ask the questions straight in the Github issues. Turns out, the problem was low quality questions and not the medium at all, and that just converted an issue that StackOverflow had solved long ago into burnout for open source developers on Github.
There's so many entitled developers out there that will come and demand changes. Github needs to step up their game and give authors more powerful tools. It might make new devs feel less welcome, but the balance is tipped way too much to allow anyone to create massive spam for projects right now.
What are some alternatives?
Tufte CSS - Style your webpage like Edward Tufte’s handouts.
Bootstrap - The most popular HTML, CSS, and JavaScript framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web.
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
Pure - A set of small, responsive CSS modules that you can use in every web project.
Bulma - Modern CSS framework based on Flexbox
Spectre.css - Spectre.css - A Lightweight, Responsive and Modern CSS Framework
card - :credit_card: make your credit card form better in one line of code
Materialize - Materialize, a CSS Framework based on Material Design
tachyons - Functional css for humans
UI kit - A lightweight and modular front-end framework for developing fast and powerful web interfaces
Primer - The CSS design system that powers GitHub