sanitize.css
normalize.css
sanitize.css | normalize.css | |
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2 | 53 | |
5,136 | 51,836 | |
0.0% | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 1 year ago | 3 months ago | |
CSS | CSS | |
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal | MIT License |
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sanitize.css
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Is there a way to shorten .contactform h2,… and to say something like .contactform (h2, ul, label)?
I knew about :is() for a long while but rarely used it due to its specificity issues. I only learned about :where() when I happened to go digging through the source of a reset. D:
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4 Awesome Tools That Help You To Manage You CSS Code Better
Sanitize.css Sanitize.css is a CSS library that provides consistent, cross-browser default styling of HTML elements alongside useful defaults. It is developed alongside normalize.css, which means every normalization is included, and every normalization and opinion are clearly marked and documented.
normalize.css
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What is cross-browser compatibility, and why should you care?
You can also consider using stylesheets like Normalize.css, Eric Mayer's CSS reset rules to establish a baseline layout across browsers.
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An Introduction to the Vision Board Project
==> Click here to get the code from necolas.github.io!
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How to Debug CSS
4. Understanding the box model A thorough understanding of the box model is essential for effective CSS debugging. The box model, encompassing margin, border, and padding, plays a fundamental role in CSS styling. By familiarizing yourself with the box model, you can better identify and resolve many styling issues. Browser issues. Different browsers render our styling differently. This is because browsers have their own default stylesheets called user-agent styles. To override these inconsistencies you should consider resetting your CSS to provide cross-browser consistency. A good resource I use when writing vanilla CSS is Normalize CSS. For example, it resets the margin, padding to zero, and the box-sizing property to border-box.
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Responsiveness issue
In addition to the answers below about flex, grid and media queries, you can also additionally take a look to the "clearfix hack" (https://www.w3schools.com/howto/howto_css_clearfix.asp) which is a common issue when you position elements and also use something like Normalize.css (see https://github.com/necolas/normalize.css) to avoid some weird bugs in your front end.
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Why is the font rendered differently on Firefox and Chrome? How can I make it the same?
is this github what you used? Seems like it hasn't been updated in a while
- Basic_Design_System: An extremely basic design system that I’ve created. Meant to be used as a boilerplate for creating more advanced design systems, while also looking good if used out-of-the-box with zero altering.
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How do you implement CSS for different browsers in the same stylesheet?
You can just download the normalize.css file from their Github, and then include it on your page(s) as the first stylesheet link. It will basically override the "default" styles of the various browsers so that you have a common starting point. That should handle various things like margins and paddings.
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Should I Be Using -webkit-appearance?
I want to use a CSS normalizer for the first time on a new project I'm doing, and in the code there is a couple -webkit-appearance properties that VSCode is telling me are not standard. However, when I search up if this is really a problem or not, I don't find anything saying yes or no. So... Is it actually a problem to use this property?
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How to build a docs site with Next.js and Contentlayer
reset.css — download here
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What working with Tailwind CSS every day for 2 years looks like
This might be helpful.
https://necolas.github.io/normalize.css/
Design decisions, though, are ultimately up to your taste and judgement.
What are some alternatives?
Bulma - Modern CSS framework based on Flexbox
modern-normalize - 🐒 Normalize browsers' default style
sanitize.css - A best-practices CSS foundation [Moved to: https://github.com/csstools/sanitize.css]
postcss-preset-env - Convert modern CSS into something browsers understand
animate.css - 🍿 A cross-browser library of CSS animations. As easy to use as an easy thing. [Moved to: https://github.com/animate-css/animate.css]
Materialize - Materialize, a CSS Framework based on Material Design
animate.css - 🍿 A cross-browser library of CSS animations. As easy to use as an easy thing.
bounce.js - Create beautiful CSS3 powered animations in no time.
csslint - Automated linting of Cascading Stylesheets
cssnano - A modular minifier, built on top of the PostCSS ecosystem.
stylus - Expressive, robust, feature-rich CSS language built for nodejs
humane-js - A simple, modern, browser notification system