![]() ![]() INDEX.PHP CODEKIT CODEI did take a look at oocss when it first came out, I saw a vid of Nicole Sullivan talking about her work with Facebook, IMHO in just looked like some good practice guidelines to me, I was always under the impression that CSS should be used in this way, tearing away universal chunks of code away and storing them in their own class for re-use, to me, was what CSS was all about, keeping things small and agile to use again later, like said I am not dismissing it, it was some time ago I looked into it. INDEX.PHP CODEKIT DOWNLOADI will let you know how I get on, going to download and have a play this week. John VidalThemes replied on at 3:33 am Reply But LESS in combination with CodeKit is wicked. ![]() You can even have it compress/minify it for you so your CSS loads faster. It can be setup so that each time you save a LESS file, Codekit automatically processes it into CSS for you. Codekit understands LESS (and SASS and Stylis and Javascript and Coffeescript). In getting started with LESS, I found Codekit (). )īut, actually, the thing that has been the biggest help (for me) ISN'T specifically about LESS. Nesting selectors like that just works well with the way my brain works, I guess. the nature of LESS's structure DOES make my CSS files easier to read/understand (for me, anyway). when/if we can finally just use the standard code to define this, I'll only need to edit one spot. AND being able to pass in different sizes for the radius in each instance IS pretty handy! Plus. creating mixins for things like the CSS3 stack of browser-specific code needed for creating rounded corners (or gradients) DOES save time. ![]() being able to define and use variables for things like a site's primary & secondary colors. But it does lots of little things that, together, do make coding a bit easier (and, dare I say, more fun?!). Has it solved some big, overarching problem I was having with CSS? No. My two cents worth.Where's the paste board? It's the one thing I need.I've begun using it. Affinity has got hell of a job to catch up with Adobe, but seriously who else is going to take on the impossible, Sketch, Gimp, DrawPlus :wub: (Where I started with vectors) ? The beta's raison d'etre, is try everything, weed out the faults, then less really will mean more. Whereas Adobe has been around for decades now and has been hoovering up oodles of cash ever since: thus spawning loads of options regarding help and tools. Affinity hasn't seen it's first offspring reach its first birthday yet, (with a few years in gestation). The reason why there is so much support for Adobe is time and money. INDEX.PHP CODEKIT FULL VERSIONAlso why is there still a beta version when you can buy a full version that doesnt seem to have all the options of the beta? Adobe might be expensive at $10 a month but there is support, more tutorials than you could ever watch and they ADD options or at least put them somewhere else but they don't just disappear. The Haze Removal tool has disappeared - I cannot change the Tool UI size - The ONLY support is via forums. ![]()
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