Difference between revisions of "Cascading Style Sheets"
From Wiki @ Karl Jones dot com
Karl Jones (Talk | contribs) |
Karl Jones (Talk | contribs) (→See also) |
||
Line 9: | Line 9: | ||
* [[Conditional stylesheets]] | * [[Conditional stylesheets]] | ||
* [[CSS hacks]] | * [[CSS hacks]] | ||
− | * [[Declaration_(CSS) | + | * [[Declaration_(CSS)]] |
* [[Less (stylesheet language)]] | * [[Less (stylesheet language)]] | ||
* [[Responsive web design]] | * [[Responsive web design]] |
Revision as of 10:06, 9 September 2015
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) is a language used to define the presentation ("look and feel") of a document written in HTML or some other markup language.
Description
(TO DO: expand, organize, cross-reference, illustrate.)
See also
- Conditional stylesheets
- CSS hacks
- Declaration_(CSS)
- Less (stylesheet language)
- Responsive web design
- Sass (stylesheet language)
- Selector
External links
- Cascading Style Sheets @ Wikipedia
- Introduction to CSS 2.1 @ W3C
- Mastering CSS Principles: A Comprehensive Guide @ Smashing Magazine
- 10 Principles of the CSS Masters @ tuts+
- CSS Architectures: Principles of Code Cleanup @ SitePoint
- CSS Best Practices for Team-Based Development @ Microsoft
- Don’t use IDs in CSS selectors?
- How To Develop Scalable And Maintainable CSS @ Vanseo Design
- DRY CSS - "A don't-repeat-yourself methodology for creating efficient, unified and Scalable stylesheets"
- Principles of writing consistent, idiomatic CSS
- Style Sheets Guide: The Cascade
- On HTML Element Identifiers
- Decoupling HTML From CSS