At Made by Many we love Sass and we love Bourbon. We use these technologies in almost every project we build and they give us a great base onto which we can build our CSS.
In addition we've been compiling a library of common CSS patterns for some time now. We noticed that we were reusing different patterns to produce effects and layouts in all our projects and decided to break them out into reusable chunks.
The way we write CSS tends to follow BEM syntax and closely resembles some OOCSS practices. However, we tend to prefer using the Sass @include
method to add patterns to CSS rules, rather than littering our elements with multiple styles.
For instance, we tend to favour this approach with mixins:
.my-list-element {
@include inline-list;
background: blue;
}
<ul class="my-list-element">
</ul>
Rather than this one with additional classes:
.my-list-element {
background: blue;
}
<ul class="my-list-element inline-list">
</ul>
Most of these patterns were developed by much smarter people than us and this library has been compiled with patterns from all over the internet. We will try and credit those smart people where we can, but if we've overlooked anyone please let us know or submit a PR to rectify our mistake.
.list {
@include unstyled-list;
}
These patterns are a collection on Sass mixins. Much like Bourbon, nothing will be added to your compiled CSS that you did not explicitly @include
.
$ bower install css-patterns --save
In your root Sass file:
@include "bower_components/css-patterns/stylesheets/patterns"
Replace bower_components/
here with the name of your bower component directory if necessary.
$ npm install css-patterns --save
The following was adapted directly from the excellent node-bourbon project.
To use css-patterns
with tools like Gulp, Grunt, or directly with node-sass, provide the path to css-patterns
in your Sass config.
The includePaths
property returns an array of pattern paths to use in your config.
var patterns = require('css-patterns');
patterns.includePaths // Array of pattern paths
Now pass that array as a property to your Sass compilation function
var generatedCss = sass.renderSync({
file: __dirname + '/my_sass_file.scss',
includePaths: patterns.includePaths
});
In your root stylesheet include the following:
@import "patterns";
- Add a new pattern with documentation
- Update tests to reflect your change and
npm test
- Test docs locally with
npm run docs
- Commit and push
npm run publish-docs
- View at http://madebymany.github.io/css-patterns/
- Convert all patterns to mixins to promote usage with
@include
- Move to @HugoGiraudel's mixin technique. Backwards compatible.