You've probably heard of CSS reset stylesheets that provide sensible defaults for HTML elements to smooth out some of the inconsistencies between browsers. And no doubt you're aware of the plethora of fully-featured CSS toolkits that implement all manner of styles for UI components.
Badger CSS sits somewhere between the two. It provides some sensible presets for HTML elements that you can use out of the box and expect to get reasonable results. It's highly configurable and is really designed to be a starting point for building your own CSS stylesheets, design systems and UI toolkits.
See the website for documentation and demonstrations.
https://badgerpower.com/badger-css/
Add the @abw/badger-css
module to your project using your favourite
package manager.
## using npm
$ npm add @abw/badger-css
## using yarn
$ yarn add @abw/badger-css
## using pnpm
$ pnpm add @abw/badger-css
You can then import the CSS file into your site or application.
For example, to import it into a React app running under Vite, Next.js, etc., you can import the stylesheet directly into your application.
import '@abw/badger-css/styles/badger.css';
If you're using SASS / SCSS then you can import the main SCSS source file into your stylesheet.
@import '@abw/badger-css/styles/badger.scss';
There are lots. This documentation is TODO.
Check out the repository.
$ git clone https://github.com/abw/badger-css.git
$ cd badger-css
Install the dependencies.
$ pnpm install
To run the development server.
$ pnpm dev
To build for production.
$ pnpm build
To build the documentation.
$ pnpm build:docs
To preview the documentation.
$ pnpm preview
Check source code for formatting errors.
$ pnpm lint
Andy Wardley