Colette is a CSS and JS starter kit for 20 Minutes web projects. It provides basic styles and mixins to build responsive layouts, based on the 20 Minutes digital identity guidelines.
- basic typography: headings, body text, lists, etc.
- helpers: colors, borders, icons, etc.
- grid system: 12-columns based, with customizable breakpoints
- ready-to-use HTML/CSS components: buttons, navbar, socialbar, content teasers, media, and loading animation
- normalize.css by Nicolas Gallagher: a collection of HTML element and attribute style-normalizations
npm install colette --save
- See the
dist/
directory for ready-to-use CSS files. - If you want to use Colette as a kickstarter for custom stylus/css
projects, check
src/
.
You can use colette.css
as is (or minified files colette.min.css
).
But the best way to use Colette is by Stylus and JavaScript sources with a task-runner (ex: gulp, webpack).
To compile your stylus, use gulp
and gulp-stylus
/* gulpfile.js */
gulp.task('css', function () {
return gulp.src(cfg.cssDir + '*.styl')
.pipe(stylus({
include: [
PATH_TO_STYLUS_IMPORT,
AN_OTHER_PATH_TO_FIND_STYLUS_MODULES
],
'include css': true
}))
.pipe(gulp.dest('css/'))
})
PATH_TO_STYLUS_IMPORT
could be node_modules
for example if you use npm.
To compile your stylus, use stylus-loader
/* webpack.config.js */
{
test: /\.styl$/i,
use: [
'style-loader',
'css-loader',
'postcss-loader',
{
loader: 'stylus-loader',
options: {
paths: [
'node_modules',
],
'include css': true,
'resolve url': true,
stylus: {
preferPathResolver: 'webpack',
},
},
},
],
}
Colette is a collection of stylus features. You can define which styles you want to include into your final CSS file with stylus import.
By default, you include all colette.styl
and all features are in your CSS.
You can select features needed by copying colette.styl
content and choose your imports rules.
/* my_css_file.styl */
// Your own settings
// Import colette
@require 'colette/assets/styl/colette'
/* => will compile to my_css_file.css */
But can be usefull to:
- change order of imports,
- import only needed features,
- separate your critical CSS from your global CSS.
You can use colette.min.js
as is.
But the best way to use it is with a task-runner by JavaScript sources (ex: gulp, webpack).
You should use babel to transpile colette code to Javascript for Browsers.