Water.css
Milligram
Our great sponsors
Water.css | Milligram | |
---|---|---|
33 | 23 | |
8,184 | 10,158 | |
- | 0.1% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
3 months ago | 6 months ago | |
CSS | HTML | |
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.
Water.css
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Where Is Noether's Principle in Machine Learning?
Thank you!
In the beginning, I used kognise'z water.css [1], so most of the smart decisions (background/text color, margins, line spacing I think) probably come from there. Since then it's been some amount of little adjustments. The font is by Jean François Porchez, called Le Monde Livre Classic [2].
I draft in Obsidian [3] and build the site with a couple python scripts and KaTeX.
[1] https://watercss.kognise.dev/
[2] https://typofonderie.com/fr/fonts/le-monde-livre-classic
[3] https://obsidian.md/
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Ask HN: Experience Starting a Blog
Thank you!
I must give credit to Kognise though, the style is simply their formidable water.css layout. It saved me a lot of time and anguish when I was about to get my blog started.
https://watercss.kognise.dev/
- CSS for readability
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No CSS Club – because no JavaScript was not hardcore enough
https://watercss.kognise.dev/ I would argue classless css is the way to go, you just include a single css file, then write your html without touching any css anymore, all related tags in html are inherently css-ed for you. a nice trade off for me sometimes.
- Filenames and Pathnames in Shell: How to Do It Correctly
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Classless.css – Less Classes. Less Overhead
Like the previous submitter ( https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30885700 April 2022 ) I found clasless.css while investigating semantic html-oriented css libraries and this one stood out to me as having a good balance. I'm not ideologically opposed to using classes, but using them for every bit of styling seems off and I'd rather see good default styles for regular semantically structured html. For example, classless.css uses the "card" class for cards which don't have a clear analog in among standard html tags: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTML/Element
Other libraries:
Water.css: https://watercss.kognise.dev/
MVP.css: https://andybrewer.github.io/mvp/
Missing.css: https://missing.style/
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Ur Go-To on UI with Flask?
WaterCSS, very basic but good-looking UI in my opinion
- О заметках в markdown файлах
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Looks great on my machine
Slap this on it and you're good: https://github.com/kognise/water.css/
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Show HN: Neat, the Minimalist CSS Framework
- https://watercss.kognise.dev/ Small size (< 2kb)
Milligram
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Concrete.css
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!
[0] http://getskeleton.com/
[1] https://milligram.io/
[2] https://repfl.ch/
- 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
- Ask HN: No JavaScript web UI framework?
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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!
- Milligram CSS: カスタム・ビルド (Node.js 18 on Alpine Linux 3.17 使用)
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Milligram CSS: Custom build (with Node.js 18 on Alpine Linux 3.17)
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.
- Milligram – A Minimalist CSS Framework
- Suggest minimal CSS framework
What are some alternatives?
classless-css - A list of classless CSS themes/frameworks with screenshots
Tufte CSS - Style your webpage like Edward Tufte’s handouts.
pico - Minimal CSS Framework for semantic HTML
Bootstrap - The most popular HTML, CSS, and JavaScript framework for developing responsive, mobile first projects on the web.
Rust Language Server - Repository for the Rust Language Server (aka RLS)
Picnic CSS - :handbag: A beautiful CSS library to kickstart your projects
reagent - A minimalistic ClojureScript interface to React.js
Tailwind CSS - A utility-first CSS framework for rapid UI development.
hyperscript - Create HyperText with JavaScript.
Pure - A set of small, responsive CSS modules that you can use in every web project.
prism-themes - A wider selection of Prism themes
Bulma - Modern CSS framework based on Flexbox