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Bootstrap for ASP.NET MVC

You're reading from   Bootstrap for ASP.NET MVC Combine the power of ASP.NET Core with Bootstrap 4 to build elegant, responsive web apps

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Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781785889479
Length 186 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Pieter van der Westhuizen Pieter van der Westhuizen
Author Profile Icon Pieter van der Westhuizen
Pieter van der Westhuizen
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with ASP.NET Core and Bootstrap 4 2. Using Bootstrap CSS and HTML Elements FREE CHAPTER 3. Using Bootstrap Components 4. Using Bootstrap JavaScript Components 5. Creating MVC Bootstrap Helper and Tag Helpers 6. Converting a Bootstrap HTML Template into a Usable ASP.NET MVC Project 7. Using the jQuery DataTables Plugin with Bootstrap 4 8. Creating Bootstrap 4 ASP.NET MVC Sites Using Visual Studio Code A. Bootstrap Resources

CSS pre-processors

CSS pre-processors process code written in a pre-processed language, such as LESS or Sass, and convert it into standard CSS, which in turn can be interpreted by any standard web browser. CSS pre-processors extend CSS by adding features that allow variables, mixins, and functions.

The benefits of using CSS pre-processors are that they are not bound by any limitations of CSS. CSS pre-processors can give you more functionality and control over your style sheets and allow you to write more maintainable, flexible, and extendable CSS.

CSS pre-processors can also help to reduce the amount of CSS and assist with the management of large and complex style sheets that can become harder to maintain as the size and complexity increases.

In essence, CSS pre-processors such as Less and Sass enable programmatic control over your style sheets.

Bootstrap moved their source files from Less to Sass with version 4. Less and Sass are very alike in that they share a similar syntax as well as features such as variables, mixins, partials, and nesting, to name but a few.

Less was influenced by Sass, and later on, Sass was influenced by Less when it adopted CSS-like block formatting, which worked very well for Less.

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