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CSS Frameworks

January 04, 2011 6:32am

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  • #16 / Jul 12, 2011 5:51am

    Shawn Dai

    76 posts

    Hi Doug,

    I’ve yet to incorporate the build scripts in an EE workflow. I plan to do so on an upcoming project though, so I’ll report back any findings.

  • #17 / Jul 12, 2011 10:08am

    Our creative director is a fan of the square grid, which I’ve been using in conjunction with the HTML5 Boilerplate and a custom CSS reset / generic typography sheet.

  • #18 / Jul 12, 2011 1:16pm

    Michael Hahn

    316 posts

    This is very interesting as well.

    http://cssgrid.net/

  • #19 / Sep 12, 2011 4:09am

    luke holder

    71 posts

    I am now using a modified version of twitters bootstrap:

    http://twitter.github.com/bootstrap/

    what i like, is it is more than just a complete reset and grid system. Plus it sits on less js which i have been using exclusively now for months. (cant beat a color variable, especially for clients who change their minds)

  • #20 / Sep 14, 2011 10:16pm

    43north

    9 posts

    For quick responsive design prototypes, this framework is worth a look:

    http://getskeleton.com/

  • #21 / Sep 15, 2011 7:09am

    Calan

    104 posts

    Have a starting framework for most projects that combines 960 for structure and Yahoo’s CSS framework for base, reset and fonts.

  • #22 / Oct 15, 2011 9:48am

    leeaston

    634 posts

    This one looks very interesting: “An easy to use, powerful, and flexible framework for building prototypes and production code on any kind of device.

    http://foundation.zurb.com/index.php

  • #23 / Oct 20, 2011 8:59am

    Martin Luff

    52 posts

    ...I’ve been looking at this recently but have no had a chance to use it on a site: http://lessframework.com/
    Anyone have any experience with it?

    Hi Joe, yes, I’ve used LESS Frameworks but it’s now been updated with Frameless Grid - em based, adaptive and very cool IMO (works with old browsers like IE6 but also for super-wide displays, various mobile phones and tablets). No dodgy grid_ classes in your markup either…

  • #24 / Oct 21, 2011 10:50am

    wornjacket

    98 posts

    To add my two cents, I’ve used several different ones. I predominately use Nathan Smiths 960.gs with the adapt.js - however I will say that I’m moving away from it as a lot of the ‘problems’ with cross-browser are quickly falling away with the recent versions of the browsers, so its easier for me to just code my own to reduce bloat.

    If I had to pick another system I would look at Golden, http://code.google.com/p/the-golden-grid/

  • #25 / Oct 27, 2011 4:36pm

    Riverboy

    2993 posts

    No room for Stylizer or are you talking totally different way to handle things?

  • #26 / Nov 06, 2011 3:33pm

    OrganizedFellow

    435 posts

    No room for Stylizer or are you talking totally different way to handle things?

    :D I love Stylizer! I am a very visual person, so it’s my favorite app (after Notepad++).
    I bought my license last year.

    But it has problems with .less files 😊 So I’ve found myself using it less.

  • #27 / Nov 19, 2011 6:59pm

    jimmykak

    12 posts

    I absolutely must agree with Brandon on this one. It makes a lot of sense…to me anyways .Thanks 😊

     

     

  • #28 / Nov 20, 2011 9:30am

    JT Thompson

    745 posts

    Stylizer looks nice, but I’ve found over the years that using a graphical css tool actually adds an unnecessary additional step from moving things from graphical to text.

    With the development of firebug we’ve stopped using any other css tools, and the frameworks are all nice, but again, over the years we’ve developed our own framework that doesn’t need us to ‘adapt’ things. it’s already set up in the way we intend to use it. We could do this with one of those grid systems, but as they didn’t really start getting popular until after we’d already gotten in our neat little rut 😊 I don’t see us moving away from the way we do it.

    Heck I’d bet most of those grid and frameworks started out just like what we did, and most developers do. Build our own, and they expanded on it.

    So, short story long, we use a framework we developed based on our style of layout. Then adds/changes are done about 95% in firebug.

    For text, we use Notepad++ across the board for HTML, PHP, CSS, and JavaScript

  • #29 / Dec 18, 2011 11:06pm

    Pamela0101

    1 posts

    Great Info…

    Thank you, all!


    regards,

  • #30 / Dec 28, 2011 2:22pm

    We’ll make another plug for Zurb’s Foundation: http://foundation.zurb.com/. It’s quick to pick-up, supports most browsers out-of-box and very importantly - it’s “responsive”. Very well done.

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