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Mastering CSS Grid

You're reading from   Mastering CSS Grid A comprehensive and practical guide to creating beautiful layouts with CSS Grid

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781804614846
Length 330 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Pascal Thormeier Pascal Thormeier
Author Profile Icon Pascal Thormeier
Pascal Thormeier
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Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1–Working with CSS Grid
2. Chapter 1: Understanding the Basic Rules and Structures for CSS Grid FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Project Introduction: What We’ll Work on and First Tasks 4. Chapter 3: Building Advanced Grid Layouts 5. Part 2 – Understanding the CSS Grid Periphery
6. Chapter 4: Understanding and Creating Responsive and Fluid Grid Layouts 7. Chapter 5: Implementing Layouts with Flexbox and CSS Grid 8. Chapter 6: Benefits of Grid Layouts and When Not to Use Them 9. Part 3 – Exploring the Wider Ecosystem
10. Chapter 7: Polyfilling CSS Grid’s Missing Features 11. Chapter 8: Grids in the Wild – How Frameworks Implement Grids 12. Part 4 – A Quick Reference
13. Chapter 9: Quick Reference and Cheat Sheet 14. Index 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Learning how Tailwind implements grids

Tailwind is a somewhat polarising framework. On their website, the developers claim that Tailwind allows us to rapidly build modern websites without ever leaving our HTML. Tailwind uses utility classes and considers itself utility-first.

We can see the landing page of Tailwind’s website in the following screenshot:

Figure 8.1 – Tailwind’s landing page

Figure 8.1 – Tailwind’s landing page

Utility classes are a CSS paradigm that, unlike Atomic CSS, object-oriented CSS (OOCSS), or Block Element Modifier (BEM), does not directly give names to components. Instead, it introduces classes named after what they do. The philosophy behind utility frameworks is maximizing single CSS classes’ reusability.

For example, consider a hammer: we don’t have different hammers for hanging picture frames, building shelves, and fixing broken machines (well, some people do, but most people don’t); we only have a hammer, which we...

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