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PostCSS plugin for simple and responsive grid.
- Implemented using CSS flexbox.
- Adjustable grid columns in media queries.
- Adjustable grid gutter and margin in media queries.
The grid element is a container that applies the grid rules. Direct descendants of a grid element are called row elements. The row element will wraps its direct descendants (cell elements) according to the grid rules.
<!-- you can use any class for the grid, row, and cell -->
<div class="grid">
<div class="row">
<div class="cell-1"></div>
<div class="cell-2"></div>
</div>
</div>
postcss([ require('postcss-rgrid') ])
First, you have to create a grid definition.
To create a new grid definition, use @define-grid
at-rule.
In the following example the grid will be named mygrid
.
@define-grid mygrid {
gutter: 24px;
margin: 24px;
columns: 12;
}
Inside the grid definition you can setup media queries to change the grid properties when those queries are matched.
For example in the following definition mygrid
have two media queries named phone
and tablet
.
mygrid
will change its columns, gutter, and margin when those queries are matched.
@define-grid mygrid {
gutter: 24px;
margin: 24px;
columns: 12;
@define-media phone screen and (max-width: 480px) {
gutter: 8px;
margin: 16px;
columns: 4;
}
@define-media tablet screen and (min-width: 481px) and (max-width: 840px) {
gutter: 16px;
margin: 16px;
columns: 8;
}
}
To actually use the grid you must apply it to some elements.
In the following example .grid
will be the the grid container and .row
will be the grid's row.
/* CSS */
.grid {
grid: mygrid;
}
.row {
grid-row: mygrid;
}
<!-- HTML -->
<div class="grid">
<div class="row">
...
</div>
</div>
By default the grid is fluid, you can limit its width by setting max-width
on grid container.
Use @grid-cell
to apply cell styles, and @grid-cell-media
for the media breakpoints.
In the following example, .cell-1
will have 10 columns span, but on phone
(media query defined in mygrid
) it will have 2 columns span.
Take a note that on tablet
media query, .cell-1
will automatically have 8 columns span instead of 10. This is because if the cell's columns span is larger than the grid's, then the grid's will be used.
/* CSS */
.cell-1 {
@grid-cell mygrid {
grid-cell-span-columns: 10;
@grid-media phone {
grid-cell-span-columns: 2;
}
}
}
<!-- HTML -->
<div class="grid">
<div class="row">
<div class="cell-1"></div>
</div>
</div>
Cells can have two different offsets, before the cell, and after the cell.
.cell-1 {
@grid-cell mygrid {
/* 2 columns offset before the cell */
grid-cell-span-columns: 10 2;
}
}
.cell-2 {
@grid-cell mygrid {
/* 2 columns offset before the cell and 4 columns after the cell*/
grid-cell-span-columns: 10 2 4;
}
}
The grid are implemented using flexbox, so to align all cells in a row you can use align-items
property on the row elements. To align individual cell you can use align-self
property.
.row {
align-items: center;
grid-row: mygrid;
}
.cell-1 {
align-self: flex-start;
@grid-cell mygrid { ... }
}
The grid are implemented using flexbox, so to manipulate cell ordering you can use flexbox properties order
.
.cell-1 {
order: 2;
@grid-cell mygrid { ... }
}
.cell-2 {
order: 1;
@grid-cell mygrid { ... }
}
@define-grid
defines a new grid and gives a name to it.
Usage:
@define-grid <grid-name> { ... }
Properties that are available to be used inside @define-grid
rules are:
columns
(default: 12): the number of grid's columns.gutter
(default: 16px): width of the grid's gutter.margin
(default: 16px): width of the margin between each grid's cells.
@define-media
defines media breakpoint to change the grid properties.
@define-media
can only be used inside @define-grid
.
@define-media
used the same set of properties as @define-grid
Usage:
@define-grid <grid-name> {
@define-media <media-name> <media-queries> {
/* change the grid properties */
}
}
@define-media
parameters:
media-name
: name to be used to reference this media breakpoints.media-queries
: the media queries.
Use the grid
property to apply grid's container rules.
Usage:
.myGrid {
/* ... */
grid: <grid-name>;
/* ... */
}
Use the grid-row
property to apply grid's row rules.
Usage:
.myGridRow {
/* ... */
grid-row: <grid-name>;
/* ... */
}
Use the @grid-cell
at-rule inside CSS selector to apply grid's cell rules to
the selector.
Usage:
.myGridCell {
@grid-cell <grid-name> { /* ... */ }
}
Inside the @grid-cell
rule, you must set the grid-cell-span-columns
property
to configure the grid's cell.
Use the grid-cell-span-columns
property to configure a grid's cell.
Usage:
.myGridCell {
@grid-cell <grid-name> {
grid-cell-span-columns: <cell-columns> [offset-before] [offset-after];
}
}
Property values:
cell-columns
: number of columns for the cell.offset-before
: number of columns for the offset before the cell.offset-after
: number of columns for the offset after the cell.
Inside @grid-cell
, you can use @grid-cell-media
at-rule to modify cell's property at the grid's media
breakpoint.
This rule can only be used inside @grid-cell
at-rule.
Usage:
.myGridCell {
@grid-cell <grid-name> {
@grid-cell-media <media-name> {
/* Change the cell's properties */
}
}
}
Parameters:
media-name
: the name of media queries defined in grid's definition.
This rule is basically just a CSS media queries, so inside this rule you're not
limited to only alter the grid-cell-span-columns
property, but you can also
alter any other properties.
When not inside a cell elements, you can use @grid-media
at-rule to use media
queries defined in a grid definition.
Usage:
.mySelector {
@grid-media <grid-name> <media-name> {
/* ... */
}
}
Parameters:
grid-name
: the name of grid definition.media-name
: the name of media query defined in the specified grid definition.