Wednesday, September 24, 2014

5 Standardized Methods for Writing CSS

CSS is hard to maintain and scale without a well-defined approach. Here are five CSS development methodologies and style guides that can help.



1. SMACSS


SMACSS


SMACSS stands for Scalable and Modular Architecture for CSS. A core idea behind this CSS development approach is minimizing the depth of selectors in order to keep them modular as well as to lower dependency on the HTML structure. In SMACSS, there are five style-rule categories: Base, Layout, Module, State, and Theme.


2. CSS Guidelines


CSS Guidelines


CSS Guidelines is a comprehensive guide for writing maintainable CSS. It has rules such as limiting stylesheet lines to 80 characters, using soft tabs equal to four spaces, and so forth.


3. OOCSS


OOCSS


OOCSS stands for Object-oriented CSS. The central component of this approach is the CSS object, defined as "a repeating visual pattern, that can be abstracted into an independent snippet of HTML, CSS, and possibly JavaScript."1


4. BEM


BEM


BEM stands for Block, Element, Modifier. In this front-end development methodology, a block is a discrete component, or a "building block". An element is a part of a block; for instance, a search form block has two elements: (1) a text input box and (2) a button.  A modifier is a property that changes a block or element visually or behaviorally. Each block has a unique name (a CSS class).


5. idiomatic CSS


idiomatic CSS


Principles of writing consistent, idiomatic CSS — or idiomatic CSS for short — is a CSS development style guide. It includes guidelines for code-formatting, commenting in the stylesheet, and such. The core principle behind this style guide is to keep your source CSS consistent and readable.


Citations


  1. oocss Wiki

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About the Author


Jacob Gube is the founder of Six Revisions. He’s a front-end web developer. If you’d like to connect with him, head over to the contact page and follow him on Twitter: @sixrevisions.


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5 Standardized Methods for Writing CSS

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