NOTE I now use the conventions detailed in the SUIT framework
Used to provide structural templates.
Pattern
t-template-name
NOTE I now use the conventions detailed in the SUIT framework
Used to provide structural templates.
Pattern
t-template-name
@main-font-size: 16px; | |
.x-rem (@property, @value) { | |
// This is a workaround, inspired by https://github.com/borodean/less-properties | |
@px-fallback: @value * @main-font-size; | |
-: ~`(function () { return ';@{property}: @{px-fallback}'; }())`; | |
-: ~`(function () { return ';@{property}: @{value}rem'; }())`; | |
} |
Today, single page web apps are driving many websites that we use each and every day. Instead of having your browser request a new web page for each and every action you perform on a web page, single page web apps may load all in one request to smoothly and quickly transition with every action you perform.
When building single page web apps, you may decide to retrieve all of the HTML, CSS and Javascript with one single page load or dynamically load these resources as the user moves about your site. Either way, it can be a pain to bundle all of these assets together for the end user to download from your web server. This is where webpack comes into play.
webpack does all of the heavy lifting bundling all of your HTML, CSS and Javascript together. If you write your site all from scratch or depend on dependencies from npm, webpack takes care of packaging it all together for you. It has the ability to take your single page web app, cut out all of the code you don't need, then packa
https://twitter.com/snookca/status/1073299331262889984?s=21
Happy to chat about this. There’s an obvious disclaimer that there’s a cost to css-in-js solutions, but that cost is paid specifically for the benefits it brings; as such it’s useful for some usecases, and not meant as a replacement for all workflows.
(These conversations always get heated on twitter, so please believe that I’m here to converse, not to convince. In return, I promise to listen to you too and change my opinions; I’ve had mad respect for you for years and would consider your feedback a gift. Also, some of the stuff I’m writing might seem obvious to you; I’m not trying to tell you if all people of some of the details, but it might be useful to someone else who bumps into this who doesn’t have context)
So the big deal about css-in-js (cij) is selectors.