Category: CSS
Description: Charts.css is a modern CSS framework. It uses CSS utility classes to style HTML elements as charts.
Description: Pure CSS Stripes Generator - No Flash, No Image, ONLY CSS. Generate Striped backgrounds using only CSS
Description: Expressive, dynamic, robust CSS — expressive, robust, feature-rich CSS preprocessor
Description: Getting started | Less.js. Less extends CSS with dynamic behavior such as variables, mixins, operations and functions. Less runs on both the server-side (with Node.js and Rhino) or client-side (modern browsers only).
Description: Sass: Syntactically Awesome Style Sheets. Syntactically Awesome Style Sheets
Description: meyerweb.com. The web home of Eric A. Meyer, CSS guy; and his wife Kathryn, doctor of nursing.
Description: Normalize.css: Make browsers render all elements more consistently.
Description: A Good Front-End Architecture - SitePoint. Matt goes through what we need from a good front-end architecture and outlines how we can create the structure for it.
Description: Enduring CSS: writing style sheets for rapidly changing, long-lived projects – Ben Frain
Description: rstacruz/rscss. Reasonable System for CSS Stylesheet Structure. Contribute to rstacruz/rscss development by creating an account on GitHub.
Description: CSS Architecture — Philip Walton. To many Web developers, being good at CSS means you can take a visual mock-up and replicate it perfectly in code. You don't use tables, and you pride yourself on using as few images as possible. If you're really good, you use the latest and greatest techniques like media queries, transitions and transforms. While all this is certainly true of good CSS developers, there's an entirely separate side to CSS that rarely gets mentioned when assessing one's skill.
Description: Trello CSS Guide. Trello CSS Guide. GitHub Gist: instantly share code, notes, and snippets.
Description: GitHub’s CSS. I’m always interested in the development details of other products, particularly their styleguides and approach to CSS. Given my penchant for the otherwise inane CSS details, I decided to write a bit about GitHub’s CSS.
Description: necolas/idiomatic-css. Principles of writing consistent, idiomatic CSS. Contribute to necolas/idiomatic-css development by creating an account on GitHub.
Description: SUIT CSS: style tools for UI components
Description: Code Guide by @mdo. Standards for developing consistent, flexible, and sustainable HTML and CSS
Description: CSS Guidelines. High-level advice and guidelines for writing sane, manageable, scalable CSS