tailwind-starter
Gutenberg
tailwind-starter | Gutenberg | |
---|---|---|
2 | 3 | |
3 | 4,771 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 3 months ago | |
SCSS | SCSS | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
tailwind-starter
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wondering what's the next step should be
i'm working on a starter template (gulp + tailwind) and i just finished integrating all of my helpers from my old starter (bootstrap) ... it has everything i can think of (from development to post production optimizations) and now i'm stuck .. i could integrate vue (i work with vue alot) but i feel like it'll just be extra overhead and i want to make the template a general starting point that every one can use no matter what they work with. i still have documentation stuff to do but that's it .. i ran out of idea so can any one please help. the repo is here (https://github.com/yahia-raheem/tailwind-starter). basically what i'm trying to do is a pure html starting point for beginners to help with post-development optimizations, with some scss mixins and js functions to make their life, and mine, easier.
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Need Some Help
Guys i've been working on a tailwind starter template for like a week now and i'm already running out of ideas. can you guys look at it and tell me what would you do next ? here is the link: https://github.com/yahia-raheem/tailwind-starter for example im not sure i like is my nested route implementation .. i don't think it's even needed at all but it does look cool XD
Gutenberg
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Laying Out a Print Book with CSS
I love reading printed books and blog posts. For those interested, a starting point for printable CSS is Gutenberg[1]. This has been my go-to for the print media in CSS. I believe I stopped looking for another one with my lack of deeper involvement in development of styles.
I'm also guilty of picking Baskerville as the default classic look to printable font-family and even had resorted to it for screen.
Besides the tools mentioned in the article (Vellum and Atticus), Ulysses also has a good option for print-ready output.
1. https://github.com/BafS/Gutenberg
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I hate vertical scrolling. How can I paginate the web?
Recently, I re-designed my blog and I went looking for a Print CSS starter framework. I found a nice, simple, lean one -- Gutenberg[1]. It is less than 5KB before zipping.
I hope people still do print.css. I also have a habit of printing interesting articles to read away from the screen.
1. https://github.com/BafS/Gutenberg
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CSS Deep
BafS/Gutenberg - Modern framework to print the web correctly.
What are some alternatives?
animxyz - The first truly composable CSS animation library. Built for Vue, React, SCSS, and CSS, AnimXYZ will bring your website to life.
css-loaders - A collection of loading spinners animated with CSS
long-haul - A minimal, type-focused Jekyll theme.
PageLoadingEffects - Modern ways of revealing new content using SVG animations.
berry-11ty - Eleventy (11ty) playground with multi-sections landing pages setup, and Frontend workflow (Scss, JS es6+) implemented with gulp
simptip - A simple CSS tooltip made with Sass
NES.css - NES-style CSS Framework | ファミコン風CSSフレームワーク
colors - Smarter defaults for colors on the web.
magic - CSS3 Animations with special effects
odometer
pnotify - Beautiful JavaScript notifications with Web Notifications support.
awesome-conferences