Rebuilding the Foundation of Etsy’s Seller Tools - Code as Craft
At its core, the Etsy marketplace is powered by its sellers. The Shop Management team at Etsy is comprised of engineers, designers, product managers, usability researchers, and data analysts who wo…
BEM and SMACSS: Advice From Developers Who've Been There
Patrick contacted a number of developers who have used BEM and SMACSS in their projects, and collected their thoughts on how they can be used effectively.
Paul Lloyd perches his partridge in the CSS pear tree to discuss naming methodologies, ontologies and semantics. What’s in a name? That which we call a cherub by any other name would smell as sweet.
How We’re Using Modules to Organize Our Front-End Code - Tuts Code Article
Ever wondered how a large site like Tuts+ keeps its CSS, HTML and JavaScript in order over continued development and iteration? I’m going to show you the process we’ve implemented to keep it all...
How We’re Using Modules to Organize Our Front-End Code - Tuts Code Article
Ever wondered how a large site like Tuts+ keeps its CSS, HTML and JavaScript in order over continued development and iteration? I’m going to show you the process we’ve implemented to keep it all...
Naming CSS Stuff Is Really Hard | Sparkbox | Web Design and Development
Limit gross refactoring tomorrow by picking class names that are less likely to change. Ethan shares three naming options to help cushion the blow of future design changes.
Scaling Down The BEM Methodology For Small Projects
Front-end development is no longer about individual frameworks. Tools are available — we merely have to choose. To make the right choices for your project, you need to start with a general approach, or methodology. But most methodologies have been created by big companies? Are they still useful for small companies, or do we need to reinvent them at a small scale?
A collection of common CSS module class names. Contribute to bjankord/CSS-Components-Modifiers-And-Subcomponents-Collection development by creating an account on GitHub.
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.
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 tra