npm run compile
npm i -S active-share-styles
Download the latest release and copy the LESS files over to your own project. Once your files are in place, jump to the usage guidelines for including styles into your own CSS.
Once included, simply @import
either the master LESS file, or the individual files as you need them.
// Example: All of Styles
@import "active-share-styles/less/active";
// Example: Individual files
@import "active-share-styles/less/base/variables";
@import "active-share-styles/less/base/font";
@import "active-share-styles/less/base/utility";
The documentation is built with Jekyll and published to http://starandtina.github.io/active-share-styles
via the gh-pages
branch.
You'll need the following installed:
- Latest Jekyll:
gem install jekyll
- Latest Rouge:
gem install rouge
- Latest LESS:
gem install less
- Latest Grunt CLI:
npm install -g grunt-cli
- Node.js and npm
Chances are you have all this already if you work on github/github
or similar projects. If you have all those set up, now you can install the dependencies:
npm i
From the Terminal, start a local Jekyll server:
jekyll s
Open a second Terminal tab to automatically recompile the LESS files, run autoprefixer, and update our CSS stats file:
grunt watch
Alternatively, you can manually run grunt
and jekyll serve
when needed.
Use the included Grunt task to generate and publish docs to the gh-pages
branch.
grunt publish
This takes the _site
directory, generates it's own Git repository there, and publishes the contents to the gh-pages
branch here on GitHub. Changes are reflected in the hosted docs within a minute or so.
When compiling or watching the LESS files, Grunt will automatically generate a .css-stats.md
file. This is tracked in the Git repository to provide us historical and contextual information on the changes we introduce. For example, we'll know when the number of selectors or declarations rises sharply within a single change.
For transparency into our release cycle and in striving to maintain backward compatibility, it is maintained under the Semantic Versioning guidelines. Sometimes we screw up, but we'll adhere to those rules whenever possible.