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The HTML and CSS Workshop

You're reading from   The HTML and CSS Workshop Learn to build your own websites and kickstart your career as a web designer or developer

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Product type Paperback
Published in Nov 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838824532
Length 700 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (4):
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Matt Park Matt Park
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Matt Park
Brett Jephson Brett Jephson
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Brett Jephson
Marian Zburlea Marian Zburlea
Author Profile Icon Marian Zburlea
Marian Zburlea
Lewis Coulson Lewis Coulson
Author Profile Icon Lewis Coulson
Lewis Coulson
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Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to HTML and CSS 2. Structure and Layout FREE CHAPTER 3. Text and Typography 4. Forms 5. Themes, Colors, and Polish 6. Responsive Web Design and Media Queries 7. Media – Audio, Video, and Canvas 8. Animations 9. Accessibility 10. Preprocessors and Tooling 11. Maintainable CSS 12. Web Components 13. The Future of HTML and CSS Appendix

Introduction to Maintainable CSS

In the previous chapters, we learned about a wide variety of different aspects of HTML5 and CSS3, including everything you need to know as a beginner to write HTML5 and CSS3 yourself and develop your first website, but how can we help keep a website maintainable? How do we help prevent the common pitfalls of managing large codebases in CSS? How do we write code that allows a team of developers to work on a website project at the same time and that's also friendly to future developers?

In this chapter, we're going to explore what maintainable CSS looks like, how to write it, and why we use it. Let's start by understanding why we would want to write maintainable CSS.

Say you are working with a large codebase that includes thousands of lines of CSS and the client wants to change a button style that's used throughout the website. Easy, right? Well if we had written maintainable CSS for this project, then we could change this button...

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